- Bitcoin held near $63,800 on Monday — down just 0.3% over 24 hours and up 2% on the week — as a fourth round of US strikes on Iran in a week triggered sharp moves across every other major asset class: spot gold slid as much as 1.6% to near $4,050/oz, Brent crude jumped 4% to above $79/barrel, US Treasuries fell across the curve (2-year yield climbing to its highest since February 2025), and MSCI’s Asia Pacific equities gauge dropped 1.6%; the divergence marks what appears to be a structural decoupling of crypto from geopolitical risk.
- The traditional-market logic was coherent: a fourth Iran strike raises oil supply risk → higher oil → higher inflation → Federal Reserve holds rates higher for longer → gold falls (higher real yields reduce appeal of non-yielding assets) → bonds fall (same reason) → equities fall (higher discount rates compress valuations); Fed minutes from June already showed a few policymakers saw a case for raising rates, adding to the hawkish repricing; but bitcoin, which would historically have sold off hard on a single Hormuz headline, sat out the entire sequence.
- The one crypto-adjacent thread ran through Korean chip stocks: SK Hynix shares plunged 12% in Seoul after the chipmaker’s US-listed shares surged 13% on their Friday debut (the $26.5B offering — the largest foreign debut in the US ever), a reversal that helped drag the Kospi down 7%; the chip cycle had been a driver of bitcoin’s Friday rally, and its reversal on Monday still left crypto flat — suggesting bitcoin is taking direction from dollar liquidity and the chip cycle rather than oil, gold, or geopolitical risk.
- CoinDesk Research’s Q2 digital assets review provides context: digital assets posted a third consecutive quarter of losses in Q2 2026, the longest losing streak since the 2022 bear market, as institutional capital rotated into AI equities and Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest quarterly outflow since launch; the decoupling from war risk on Monday is the first clearly positive signal in months, but it occurs against a backdrop of structural institutional outflows that represent the dominant medium-term trend.
What Happened?
US Central Command announced a fourth round of strikes on Iran on Monday in response to an attack on a container ship, leaving the status of the Strait of Hormuz unclear after Iran stated it would close “until further notice” — a claim the US denied. Traditional markets reacted sharply across the board. Bitcoin did not. Ether was little changed at approximately $1,800. Solana was the weakest major at $76, down 5% on the week. XRP held $1.09. The broad crypto market sat out a geopolitical shock that moved every other asset class it has historically correlated with.
Why It Matters?
Bitcoin’s non-reaction to a fourth Iran strike is analytically significant. For the past two years, crypto has broadly sold off on geopolitical risk events — particularly those that raised oil prices and Fed hawkishness concerns, both of which reduce risk appetite and tighten dollar liquidity. The fact that bitcoin held through a weekend of strikes, a Monday selloff in every correlated asset, and a hawkish Fed repricing is a marked behavioral change. The interpretation that emerges — that bitcoin is now trading the chip cycle and dollar liquidity rather than geopolitical risk — is consistent with institutional narratives about bitcoin as a macro asset that responds to liquidity conditions rather than fear. Whether this is a durable regime change or a temporary divergence that mean-reverts when the next shock is large enough remains to be seen.
What’s Next?
Bitcoin is approaching a “power law support line” that Fidelity has tracked since 2015, according to separate CoinDesk reporting — a technical level that has historically represented a floor in prior bear cycles. The macro calendar this week includes US inflation data and second-quarter earnings reports from major technology companies, both of which will affect dollar liquidity and risk appetite more than the Iran situation. Watch for whether the Bitcoin ETF outflow trend from Q2 reverses as institutional capital reassesses the AI equity trade after Nvidia’s $1 trillion market cap decline.
Source: CoinDesk











