Bitcoin Falls Below $69,000 as Iran War Fears Drive Crypto Selloff

Market Snapshot
The Signal
Bitcoin is not acting like digital gold right now. It is acting like a high-beta risk asset. When Trump threatened to strike Iran’s power plants last week, BTC dropped to a low of $67,825 in a single session while traditional safe havens like gold surged. The Fear and Greed Index hit 10, a level last seen during the FTX collapse in 2022. The culprit is the same macro pressure squeezing equities: war-driven oil prices above $100 a barrel, a Federal Reserve that is holding rates steady, and a global investor base pulling back from anything speculative. The brief recovery to $69,000 came only after Trump announced a 5-day pause on Iran strikes, triggering a short squeeze. But with Iran now denying any negotiations took place, that relief looks fragile.
“In a war-driven risk-off market, Bitcoin follows stocks down. It does not follow gold up.”
What To Watch
- →The $67,000 level. That floor held during the panic low on March 22. If it breaks, the next meaningful support is around $63,000. Traders are watching it closely.
- →Iran negotiations. Any credible signal of a ceasefire or talks would likely trigger a sharp crypto rally. The market is priced for ongoing conflict. Any surprise de-escalation is fuel for a reversal.
- →Institutional buying. Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) purchased $2.9 billion in Bitcoin during the recent dip. Watch whether other institutional buyers step in at these levels or wait for a deeper correction.
