Bitcoin held near $63,800 on Monday while gold, oil, equities and government bonds all slumped on a fourth round of U.S. strikes on Iran inside a week. The largest cryptocurrency was down just 0.3% over 24 hours and up 2% on the week, even as spot gold slid as much as 1.6% to near $4,050 an ounce, Brent crude jumped 4% above $79 a barrel, the two-year Treasury yield climbed to its highest since February 2025 and MSCI's Asia Pacific equities gauge dropped 1.6%. Ether traded sideways near $1,800, up 2% on the week, with Solana the weakest major at $76, down 5% over seven days, while XRP held $1.09 and dogecoin sat near $0.07.
Why it matters
The war shock priced a single fear across TradFi: that a wider conflict keeps crude elevated and forces the Federal Reserve to hold rates higher for longer. Minutes of the Fed's June meeting show a few policymakers saw a case for raising rates before backing a hold. Gold sold off because a higher-for-longer path lifts real yields and dulls the appeal of a metal that pays nothing, and Treasuries fell for the same reason. Bitcoin, which once dumped on a single Hormuz headline, did none of it. The Central Command confirmed the latest strikes in response to an attack on a container ship, and roughly a fifth of the world's seaborne oil normally passes through the strait.
Market impact
The one cross-asset thread with real crypto read-through ran through Korean chip stocks. SK Hynix shares plunged 12% in Seoul after the chipmaker's U.S.-listed shares surged 13% on their Friday debut, a reversal that dragged the Kospi down 7%. That chip trade had been the same flow lifting bitcoin into Friday's close, and its sharp unwind on Monday still left crypto flat in either direction. The takeaway for positioning: bitcoin is increasingly trading dollar liquidity and the chip-driven equity cycle rather than Middle East risk, which makes any real risk-off episode in software and AI hardware the new transmission channel to watch, not crude.
Frequently asked questions
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What happened to bitcoin's price during the latest U.S. strikes on Iran?
Bitcoin held near $63,800 on Monday, down just 0.3% over 24 hours and up 2% on the week, even as gold, oil, equities and Treasuries all sold off on the fourth round of U.S. strikes on Iran in a week.
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Why did gold and bonds fall while bitcoin held steady?
Traders priced in a higher-for-longer Fed path: a wider conflict keeps oil elevated and gives the Fed cover to hold rates, lifting real yields. Gold and Treasuries sold off on that read while bitcoin did not react.
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How does this compare to past Middle East shocks for crypto?
Bitcoin once dumped fast on a single Hormuz headline. Through this round of strikes and a Monday selloff across every traditional war hedge, BTC sat in a tight range, signalling it no longer trades war news.
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What cross-asset thread actually moved crypto this week?
Chip stocks. SK Hynix's U.S. debut had lifted both equities and bitcoin into Friday's close. A 12% reversal in Seoul on Monday dragged the Kospi down 7% but left crypto flat, showing the chip-cycle channel now overrides the geopolitics channel.
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What is the new signal investors should watch for bitcoin?
Dollar liquidity and the AI-hardware equity cycle, not crude or Hormuz risk. A real risk-off episode in software and AI chips is the new transmission mechanism into BTC, per the article's framing.
CoinDesk