Bitcoin reclaims $77,000 after Trump comments on US-Iran deal
A presidential tweet giveth, a presidential tweet taketh away, and then giveth again: BTC whipsawed as geopolitical tensions in the Gulf drove $580 million in liquidations before a swift recovery.
Bitcoin climbed back above $77,000 after President Trump announced a pause on planned military action against Iran, citing ongoing negotiations and requests from Gulf leaders. The recovery came just hours after BTC had been dragged below that level by the same president’s earlier aggressive rhetoric toward Tehran.
From saber-rattling to deal-making in four hours
Trump first warned Iran that “the clock is ticking,” a message that markets interpreted as a signal of imminent military escalation. Bitcoin promptly dropped to approximately $76,500.
That decline triggered roughly $580 million in liquidations of long positions within just four hours. In English: traders who had bet on Bitcoin going up got wiped out at a pace of about $2.4 million per minute.
Then came the pivot. Trump announced that Gulf leaders, including those from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, had requested a halt to the planned strike. The president framed the pause as part of advancing negotiations toward a deal with Iran. Bitcoin responded by climbing back above $77,000.
Why Iran matters for Bitcoin
The tensions between Washington and Tehran revolve around two main pressure points: control of the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes, and stalled nuclear negotiations that have dragged on for years. Any escalation threatens oil supply chains, which ripples into inflation expectations, US Treasury yields, and risk appetite across every asset class.
BTC price movements have mirrored developments in US-Iran relations since early this year, reacting to diplomatic progress with rallies and to escalatory signals with sharp selloffs.
US authorities have frozen approximately $344 million in Iranian-linked crypto assets in recent months, part of a broader enforcement effort targeting digital asset use for sanctions evasion.
What this means for investors
The $580 million in liquidations represents real money lost by real traders who were positioned for a move that didn’t come, or came too late. When Trump’s warning hit, liquidation cascades began almost immediately, compounding the initial selloff as forced selling pushed prices lower, which triggered more liquidations, which pushed prices lower still.
The frozen $344 million in Iranian crypto assets also raises a secondary risk worth monitoring. If enforcement actions expand, they could create selling pressure in specific tokens or on specific exchanges, adding a regulatory dimension to an already complicated geopolitical picture.
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