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US and Iran exchange strikes for second consecutive night as crypto markets brace for fallout

US and Iran exchange strikes for second consecutive night as crypto markets brace for fallout

Bitcoin holds steady while traditional markets wobble, and Iran's multi-billion dollar crypto ecosystem faces fresh scrutiny amid escalating military conflict

US Central Command launched strikes against multiple Iranian military targets on June 10, 2026, marking the second consecutive night of direct military engagement between Washington and Tehran.

The immediate trigger: the downing of a US Army Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz on June 9, which President Trump directly attributed to Iranian forces. The retaliatory US strikes targeted air defense systems and surveillance installations across Iran. Tehran answered by hitting US-linked locations in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan, effectively shredding a ceasefire that had held since April.

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A conflict with deep roots and a short fuse

The 2026 Iran war kicked off with significant US-Israeli airstrikes on February 28. Those initial operations involved over 900 strikes from US-Israeli forces and resulted in the death of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Trump’s public statements that Iran would “pay the price” for failed negotiations have complicated the diplomatic atmosphere. Iran’s strikes on US-linked positions across three separate countries, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan, suggest Tehran is willing to expand the geographic scope of its response.

Bitcoin stays calm while oil and equities don’t

Bitcoin has shown limited immediate reaction to the latest round of military escalation, maintaining crucial price levels even as traditional risk assets have wobbled. Oil prices and equities have experienced more pronounced volatility. The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply on any given day.

Iran’s crypto economy and the sanctions cat-and-mouse game

Iran’s cryptocurrency ecosystem is valued at approximately $7.7 to $7.8 billion as of early 2026, with a significant portion of that activity aimed at circumventing international sanctions. In 2026 alone, US Treasury and OFAC authorities froze $344 million in digital assets linked to Iranian operations.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

US and Iran exchange strikes for second consecutive night as crypto markets brace for fallout

US and Iran exchange strikes for second consecutive night as crypto markets brace for fallout

Bitcoin holds steady while traditional markets wobble, and Iran's multi-billion dollar crypto ecosystem faces fresh scrutiny amid escalating military conflict

US Central Command launched strikes against multiple Iranian military targets on June 10, 2026, marking the second consecutive night of direct military engagement between Washington and Tehran.

The immediate trigger: the downing of a US Army Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz on June 9, which President Trump directly attributed to Iranian forces. The retaliatory US strikes targeted air defense systems and surveillance installations across Iran. Tehran answered by hitting US-linked locations in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan, effectively shredding a ceasefire that had held since April.

Advertisement

A conflict with deep roots and a short fuse

The 2026 Iran war kicked off with significant US-Israeli airstrikes on February 28. Those initial operations involved over 900 strikes from US-Israeli forces and resulted in the death of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Trump’s public statements that Iran would “pay the price” for failed negotiations have complicated the diplomatic atmosphere. Iran’s strikes on US-linked positions across three separate countries, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Jordan, suggest Tehran is willing to expand the geographic scope of its response.

Bitcoin stays calm while oil and equities don’t

Bitcoin has shown limited immediate reaction to the latest round of military escalation, maintaining crucial price levels even as traditional risk assets have wobbled. Oil prices and equities have experienced more pronounced volatility. The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply on any given day.

Iran’s crypto economy and the sanctions cat-and-mouse game

Iran’s cryptocurrency ecosystem is valued at approximately $7.7 to $7.8 billion as of early 2026, with a significant portion of that activity aimed at circumventing international sanctions. In 2026 alone, US Treasury and OFAC authorities froze $344 million in digital assets linked to Iranian operations.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.