
Bitcoin slipped ~1% over the past 24 hours to $66,772, while Ethereum fell 2.2% to $1,971 (intraday low $4,070), according to The Block’s price page. The moves came after weekend volatility triggered by U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Iran that reportedly killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Bitcoin traded choppily between $63,000–$66,000 over the weekend but avoided the sharper declines seen in traditional risk assets when Asian markets reopened.
Analysts highlighted crypto’s 24/7 liquidity as a key factor in its relative stability:
Asian equities opened sharply lower on Monday:
Oil prices surged, with Brent crude around $78/barrel (+7% daily), driven by fears of disruption through the Strait of Hormuz. Gold rose 1.9% to $5,381/oz.
Rick Maeda (Presto Research):
“If crude pushes and holds above $90, inflation expectations rise, real yields firm, USD strengthens. This tightens liquidity, and crypto trades like a high-beta macro asset in that regime.”
Jeff Mei (BTSE): Markets are especially sensitive to threats to Strait of Hormuz shipping (one-fifth of global oil flows). Recent ship attacks and rerouting have already lifted insurance costs.
No major stablecoin stress or liquidation cascades were visible, per Maeda. Hyperliquid perpetual futures (oil-linked and metals contracts) moved sharply, providing continuous price discovery through the weekend. Crypto appears to be trading in line with macro risk sentiment but has remained steadier than traditional assets.
Traders are monitoring:
Bitcoin support sits near $63,000–$64,000 (weekend low zone). Ethereum’s $4,200 pivot level remains critical. Volatility is expected to stay elevated until clearer direction emerges from the U.S.-Iran conflict.
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