Tensions around the Strait of Hormuz are beginning to ripple through global markets. Oil prices have already climbed above $100 per barrel, signaling early pressure on global energy supply.
As energy costs rise, inflation risks grow and financial conditions gradually tighten. This shift often strengthens the U.S. dollar and reduces liquidity across risk markets.
Within this environment, Bitcoin [BTC] remained near $71,500, yet its behavior increasingly mirrors broader macro trends.
The real vulnerability lies in the Derivatives markets, where leverage has expanded rapidly. As positions crowd around futures contracts, even a modest liquidity squeeze could force traders to unwind exposure, allowing an energy-driven macro shock to cascade directly into Bitcoin markets.
Oil shocks could tighten liquidity and pressure Bitcoin markets
Tension around the Strait of Hormuz extends the macro pressure already building across markets. If shipping disruptions reduce the 20 million barrels of oil moving through the corridor each day, energy prices could rise quickly.
As oil climbs, inflation expectations would strengthen, which may delay central bank easing and tighten liquidity.
That pressure often spills into risk markets, including Bitcoin. Recent derivatives data already show a cooling phase.
Open Interest, which once exceeded $40 billion, has fallen to $21.8 billion, reflecting reduced leverage after earlier speculation.
Funding Rates also hover near neutral and recently dipped into negative territory, showing cautious positioning. In this environment, BTC near $71,500 still behaves like a liquidity-sensitive risk asset during macro stress.
Geopolitical oil shocks test Bitcoin’s resilience
Rising tensions around the Strait of Hormuz continue to ripple through global markets as oil prices have surged nearly 30% since the Iran conflict escalated. Higher energy costs raise inflation expectations, which can delay policy easing and gradually tighten global liquidity.
Within this environment, Bitcoin briefly dipped on the geopolitical headlines but soon rebounded, stabilizing near $70,000.
Commenting on the trend, Nic Puckrin, Co-Founder of Coin Bureau, told AMBCrypto via email,
Bitcoin has remained relatively resilient, dipping on the news but quickly recovering and trading in a tight range around $70,000.
This reaction contrasts with past shocks. During the 2022 Ukraine war, BTC eventually weakened as oil climbed toward $120, while the 2020 pandemic saw Bitcoin fall nearly 40% alongside other risk assets.
Oil-driven inflation could tighten liquidity just as Bitcoin’s derivatives positioning remains exposed. In this environment, Bitcoin may move less on crypto news and more on macro shocks triggering leveraged market unwinds.