Articles
Bitcoin

Bitcoin dips to $70.6K, oil rises after US announces Hormuz blockade

User Image

Por Anónimo

Creado April 13, 2026|2 minutos de lectura
Main Image

US President Donald Trump said Iran did not want to compromise its nuclear weapons program, stating it was the only issue that “really mattered.”

Bitcoin fell as low as $70,623 on Sunday after the US announced a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz following failed peace talks with Iran.

The price of Bitcoin (BTC) initially fell 1.9% to $71,686 after US President Donald Trump confirmed the blockade in a post to Truth Social on Sunday, adding that peace talks collapsed because Iran refused to end its nuclear program — the only issue that “really mattered.”

Bitcoin dipped further to $70,623 as the US futures markets opened late on Sunday, with oil shooting up 9.5% to $105 per barrel within half an hour of the market open, with Bitcoin down 2.7% over the day at the time of writing. 

The US-Iran dispute over control of the Strait of Hormuz — which handles one-fifth of global oil trade — has caused significant disruption in the financial markets over the past six weeks, particularly in oil markets, which have experienced their highest volatility since Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022.

In addition to the ceasefire announced on Tuesday, Iran wanted the US to pay for war reparations and to unfreeze blocked Iranian financial assets. 

Trump didn’t directly address those requests in the Truth Social post, instead blaming the fallout on Iran’s reluctance to end its nuclear weapons program.

Related: Paying Iran in crypto could put shippers at sanctions risk: Chainalysis

He also labeled Iran’s use of mines on the waterway and demands for tolls as “world extortion,” ordering the US Navy to block any vessels that paid Iran and to destroy the mines.

Despite the conflict, Bitcoin has risen about 7.4% to $71,194 since the US-Iran conflict started on Feb. 28, when a US airstrike killed Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Bitcoin has still managed to outperform the S&P 500 and gold since the US-Iran war started, though, clawing back some lost ground from October when Bitcoin hit a high of $126,080.

Magazine: Should users be allowed to bet on war and death in prediction markets?

Source: CoinTelegraph


Otros artículos publicados recientemente

Barstool's Portnoy plans to hold bitcoin down to zero after timing it wrong every time
Barstool's Portnoy plans to hold bitcoin down to zero after timing it wrong every time

Bitcoin

Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy said he will hold bitcoin all the way down to zero after buying...

Binance outflows triple to $1.2B as ETH withdrawals hit 3-year high
Binance outflows triple to $1.2B as ETH withdrawals hit 3-year high

Ethereum

Binance recorded $1.23 billion in weekly net outflows, up 207% from the previous week, as Ethereum w...

South Africa proposes crypto tax rules under existing tax framework
South Africa proposes crypto tax rules under existing tax framework

Crypto Market Analysis

South Africa’s tax authority proposed draft guidance clarifying how crypto assets are taxed under ...

Moonbeam to pivot from Polkadot to Base, unveils AI agent framework
Moonbeam to pivot from Polkadot to Base, unveils AI agent framework

Base

Moonbeam didn’t provide a timeline for when it would launch the AI agent platform but told GLMR ho...

Vitalik Buterin shares top priorities for new 'Lean Ethereum' strawmap
Vitalik Buterin shares top priorities for new 'Lean Ethereum' strawmap

Ethereum

Part of the Ethereum Foundation’s plan to make Ethereum more private and scalable is to introduce ...

How ethical hackers with just a $3,000 server found a flaw that could've put $70 billion in crypto at risk
How ethical hackers with just a $3,000 server found a flaw that could've put $70 billion in crypto at risk

Blockchain

A critical flaw in the Aptos blockchain, which was patched, gave researchers a near-90% success rate...