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Oil finally loses its grip on Bitcoin

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Bitcoin is falling while Brent crude trades below $80 after the US-Iran peace framework.

The oil shock that dominated Bitcoin’s 2026 macro trade has eased, yet BTC is still trading near $64,900, down roughly 2.5% over 24 hours on CryptoSlate’s Bitcoin price page.

Brent’s drop should have given risk assets a cleaner relief trade. Instead, it has exposed the next problem.

The market has moved past the simple oil-up, Bitcoin-down model. Lower crude removes a bearish driver. Restored liquidity support will still have to come from rates, ETF flows, and risk appetite through the end of 2026.

Global oil prices settled below $80 for the first time since the Iran war began, after the US-Iran framework pointed toward reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Ships were still not moving normally through the chokepoint, leaving the peace deal’s operational effect unresolved.

President Donald Trump’s public message that the Iran deal was complete gave traders the catalyst to remove part of the war premium from crude. Bitcoin’s response puts liquidity, rates, risk appetite, ETF demand, and crypto buyers’ willingness to step in after the geopolitical pressure at the center of the next trade.

Bitcoin Iran-deal rally faces its real test in oil flows and Fed pricingBitcoin Iran-deal rally faces its real test in oil flows and Fed pricing
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Oil Moves To The Background

The old Bitcoin trade was coherent. When the Iran war lifted crude prices, it threatened to push fuel costs through supply chains, keep inflation expectations elevated, delay Fed rate cuts, and leave risk assets with less oxygen.

That earlier oil-pressure setup was already evident when Bitcoin fell, as higher oil prices, higher yields, and the vanishing of rate-cut expectations tightened financial conditions. Oil became the first signal because it was the fastest way for the war to reach inflation, yields, and the Federal Reserve.

The Iran-deal rally framework made the same point from the other side. A peace framework could help Bitcoin only if lower crude oil prices translated into real oil flows, lower gasoline prices, softer inflation compensation, and a Fed path that looked less hostile to risk assets.

The first link in the confirmation chain has now moved. Crude has broken lower, and Bitcoin is failing to trade like an asset with a clear path back to upside.

Oil has shifted from main driver to background risk. If Hormuz traffic fails to normalize, or if energy markets reprice disruption, oil can still hurt Bitcoin. If crude keeps falling without a matching improvement in Fed expectations, ETF flows, and risk appetite, Bitcoin has less reason to rally.

The Fed remains central. The April FOMC minutes kept energy-driven inflation risk in view, and the 10-year Treasury yield was around 4.47% in the latest visible data.

That is a restrictive backdrop for a non-yielding asset that still trades like high-beta liquidity in stress periods.

The next Fed communication sits directly in that path. Bitcoin needs the market to believe lower oil will give policymakers room to stop leaning against risk.

A hawkish Fed message, sticky inflation language, or another push higher in real yields would leave the peace deal looking like a crude-market event rather than a Bitcoin liquidity event.

That is why the lower oil print places a different burden of proof on Bitcoin. The next confirmation has to come from the parts of the market that set liquidity: Fed communication, Treasury yields, dollar pressure, equity-risk appetite, ETF flows, and derivative positioning.

Bitcoin’s loses $78k while the US markets sleeps – risk takes over from oil as crude prices stay flatBitcoin’s loses $78k while the US markets sleeps – risk takes over from oil as crude prices stay flat
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Bitcoin’s loses $78k while the US markets sleeps – risk takes over from oil as crude prices stay flat

Bitcoin’s pullback near $80K mirrors a risk-off move in equities, with oil and Fed expectations still framing the macro backdrop.

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Bitcoin post-oil regime map showing macro pathways linking crude oil, Fed policy, real yields, ETF flows, liquidity conditions, and potential Bitcoin recovery or pressure scenarios.Bitcoin post-oil regime map showing macro pathways linking crude oil, Fed policy, real yields, ETF flows, liquidity conditions, and potential Bitcoin recovery or pressure scenarios.

Liquidity Becomes The Year-End Test

Bitcoin ETF flow data showed a small positive daily flow on June 16, but the magnitude is too small to account for the entire regime shift.

Earlier ETF-flow coverage showed how quickly institutional demand can turn from support into a stress point when oil, rates, and risk appetite move against Bitcoin.

That is why the year-end path depends less on one green ETF print than on repetition. Bitcoin needs several sessions in which lower oil is joined by steady ETF demand, softer yields, and a broader risk appetite.

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