Key takeaways
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- Bitcoin fell 5.4%, its biggest drop in three weeks, as geopolitical stress hit global risk assets.
- Oil’s surge mattered more than the Fed hold, pushing markets into risk-off mode.
- Bitcoin is struggling to hold rallies above $70,000, with sellers fading each breakout attempt.
- ETF inflows remain supportive, but macro and geopolitical pressure are still dominating price action.
What Happened?
Bitcoin dropped sharply as escalating tensions around Iran triggered a broader move out of risk assets. The token fell as much as 5.4% to around $70,500, reversing part of the rally that had pushed it close to $76,000 earlier in the week. Smaller crypto assets such as Ether and Solana also fell around 6%.
The key driver was not the Fed’s decision to hold rates steady. Instead, the selloff accelerated as oil prices jumped after Iran’s attack on a key LNG site in Qatar, reinforcing a risk-off mood across tech and crypto markets.
Why It Matters
This matters because it undercuts the idea that Bitcoin is consistently behaving like a geopolitical hedge. In periods of real stress, it still tends to trade more like a high-beta macro asset than digital gold.
The move also highlights a technical problem: rallies above $70,000 keep losing momentum. Each breakout attempt is running into selling pressure from short-term holders, which suggests the market still lacks the conviction needed for a sustained move higher. Even with improving ETF inflows, macro shocks are proving stronger than the bullish flow story.
What’s Next?
The next key variable is oil. If energy prices keep rising, broader market stress is likely to continue and that would make it harder for Bitcoin to stabilize. Investors should also watch whether ETF inflows remain strong enough to offset macro weakness and whether Bitcoin can reclaim the mid-$70,000 area with conviction.
The broader takeaway is that crypto may be stabilizing structurally, but in the short term it is still highly exposed to the same geopolitical and liquidity shocks hitting other risk assets.









