Rising tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have coincided with a sharp rebound in global oil prices. Year-to-date crude has climbed by more than 60%, pushing prices near $90 per barrel.
This surge is evidence of the fear that attacks on shipping could disrupt roughly 20% of global oil exports. Because nearly 35% of seaborne oil passes through the strait, markets have quickly priced geopolitical risk into energy markets.
Source: Darkfost/ X
Here, it’s worth pointing out that Brent volatility historically aligns with transitional phases in Bitcoin [BTC] market cycles. Periods of rising oil strength often appear near major Bitcoin peaks or extended consolidation zones. For instance, strong crude rallies around 2018 and 2022 overlapped with cooling momentum in Bitcoin.
Higher energy costs gradually raise inflation expectations, which then tightens liquidity conditions across global markets. As liquidity tightens, investors often reduce exposure to high-beta assets such as Bitcoin.
Still, some analysts believe that inflation shocks may support Bitcoin as a scarce hedge against currency debasement, keeping the macro debate unresolved.
Oil crash shifts macro pressure on crypto
Oil prices dropped sharply after the G7 and IEA announced a coordinated release of 400 million barrels from strategic reserves. Initially, crude traded near $116, reflecting fears of supply disruption linked to the Iran crisis.
However, soon after, the prices had plunged by 11% to nearly $103, signaling rapid intervention against energy-driven inflation risks.
That’s not all either as after President Trump announced that the Iran War could end soon, these prices fell even lower on the charts.
Such abrupt energy moves often influence crypto markets through macro liquidity channels. When oil rises sharply, inflation expectations strengthen. This then pressures central banks to maintain tighter monetary policy. In that environment, investors typically reduce exposure to speculative assets like Bitcoin.
However, the emergency reserve release may soften that pressure. Lower energy prices can stabilize inflation expectations and reduce the likelihood of aggressive rate tightening, and allow crypto markets to stabilize. Suatined geopolitical escalation could quickly reverse this relief.
Oil rally tests Bitcoin’s capital flow dominance
At the time of writing, Bitcoin was holding firm near $68,171, posting modest gains of 1.3% despite broader macro stress.
This stability coincided with tightening supply conditions across the network. Meanwhile, CME activity intensified too, with the trading volume surpassing 569,000 contracts as institutions priced a prolonged energy shock.

Source: CryptoQuant
Finally, Exchange Reserves fell to 2.7 million BTC – The lowest level since November 2019. This indicated that Long-Term Holders have continued to withdraw coins from liquid markets – A sign of capital diversification rather than a full rotation towards energy assets.
Final Summary
Bitcoin [BTC] continues to trade resiliently despite oil-driven macro volatility, as tightening exchange reserves and steady ETF inflows signal sustained institutional demand.
Capital is diversifying between energy hedges and digital scarcity, while macro liquidity conditions remain the key driver of BTC cycle momentum.
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