Bitcoin dropped roughly 2% to $68,500 in early Tuesday trading. The move fully erased Monday’s brief climb above $70,000. Geopolitical pressure, not market fundamentals, is driving the sell-off.
Monday’s short-squeeze rally was always structurally weak — and the market proved it fast.
Tuesday Deadline Triggers Risk-Off Across Markets
Trump’s deadline for Iran to reach a deal — or face expanded military strikes — moved from threat to imminent reality overnight. Tehran rejected a ceasefire proposal relayed through Pakistan, demanding sanctions relief, reconstruction commitments, and a permanent end to hostilities. Markets responded with broad caution across risk assets.
Oil surged past $113 a barrel as Trump threatened to target Iranian bridges and power plants by Tuesday night. Gold climbed to $4,654 an ounce as investors rotated toward traditional safe havens. Crypto markets partially recovered, with Bitcoin edging back toward $68,957 and Ether recovering to $2,115.
BNB slipped 0.6% to $600, and XRP fell a similar margin to $1.32 over 24 hours. The global crypto market cap held near $2.44 trillion, down just 0.2%. Monday’s rally, built on over $145 million in forced short liquidations per CoinGlass data, remains the dominant price driver — fresh capital has yet to follow.
Bitcoin Stuck in a Familiar Trap
Bitcoin has now failed at the $70,000 level repeatedly since late February, when Iran-related conflict first began weighing on risk appetite. Every rally toward that level attracts profit-taking and runs into thin liquidity. The pattern has become predictable.
The Strait of Hormuz now sits at the center of ceasefire negotiations. Any prolonged disruption to energy supply routes would significantly darken the global macro outlook. Crypto, still moving in close lockstep with broader risk assets, would absorb that pressure directly.
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