Bitcoin broke above $65,500 while Brent crude slid toward $83, a sharp risk reversal triggered by a US-Iran deal to end hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The token traded around $65,844 on Monday, up 2.1% over 24 hours, after dropping near $63,722 in early Asian trading before the deal news broke, according to CoinDesk. That put bitcoin at its highest level in nearly two weeks and about 9% above last week’s sub-$60,000 low, its weakest level since October 2024.
Bitcoin tops $65,500 after US-Iran deal flips the risk trade
The market had been pricing danger through oil. Instead, the first clear reaction to the US-Iran agreement was a bid for risk assets.
Crypto moved fast. Ether rose 2.5% to $1,721, solana gained 3.6% to $71, and XRP added 3.2% to $1.19. Hyperliquid’s HYPE led the group, jumping 7.5% to nearly $65, while BNB and dogecoin each gained more than 1%.
The broader tape backed up the crypto move. Asian stocks jumped more than 3%, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 heading for a record close. S&P 500 futures rose 1.2%. The dollar fell against major peers.
That mix matters. Bitcoin did not rally in isolation. It rose as traders cut the geopolitical premium from oil and put money back into assets that benefit when investors are less defensive.
Trump said the Strait of Hormuz will reopen on Friday upon signing.
The deal was announced first by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, followed by President Donald Trump and Iranian state media, according to CoinDesk. The full text has not been released, though the broad contours had been circulating for days.
For readers tracking the diplomacy thread, XOOMAR has followed the same Hormuz risk channel through earlier coverage of Trump Torches Iran Deal Leak as Hormuz Risk Spikes and the dollar’s response in US Dollar Defies Peace Talk as Hormuz Risk Stays Hot.
Oil selloff strips out the Hormuz premium and gives crypto breathing room
Brent crude fell more than 4% toward $83 a barrel as traders unwound the geopolitical premium that had kept oil elevated since late February.
That is the core transmission mechanism in this move. The source material says bitcoin’s drop below $60,000 last week came from two directions at once: Iran tensions pushed oil higher, higher oil reinforced bets on higher interest rates, and higher rates pulled money out of risk assets including crypto.
The deal reversed that chain.
| Market signal | Before the deal news | After the deal news |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | Fell near $63,722 in early Asian trading | Traded around $65,844, up 2.1% |
| Brent crude | Carried a geopolitical premium | Slumped more than 4% toward $83 |
| Asian stocks | Pressured by risk caution | Rose more than 3% |
| S&P 500 futures | Risk tone constrained | Gained 1.2% |
| Dollar | Supported by defensive positioning | Fell against major peers |
The Strait of Hormuz mattered here because markets had treated it as an energy-supply risk. Once the reopening timeline entered the tape, traders no longer needed to price the same level of disruption fear into crude.
XOOMAR analysis: bitcoin’s reaction looks less like a crypto-specific breakthrough and more like a fast repricing of macro risk. The strongest evidence is the cross-asset alignment: oil down, stocks up, futures up, dollar down, major tokens up. That is a risk-on move, not a lone bitcoin bid.
Still, the rally has limits. The oil shock has eased, but the demand question has not disappeared.
Strategy sales and ETF outflows keep a cap on the relief rally
The biggest warning sign sits outside the Iran story.
CoinDesk reported that Strategy disclosed earlier this month it sold 32 bitcoin to fund preferred share dividends. That sparked a selloff and challenged the assumption that Saylor would never sell. ETF outflows added pressure.
Those two issues do not get solved by a peace agreement. Lower oil can improve the mood, but it does not automatically restore institutional demand for bitcoin.
That is the tension now:
- Relief trade: The Iran deal removes a major energy-supply fear and supports risk assets.
- Demand drag: ETF outflows and Strategy’s sale raise questions about the depth of institutional buying.
- Price test: Bitcoin needs to hold the $65,500 area after the first reaction fades.
- Deal risk: Neither side has released the full text, and the Strait is expected to reopen Friday upon signing.
The strongest bullish case is simple. If oil stays near the post-deal level and institutional flows improve, bitcoin’s rebound has more room to run. The weakest version is just as clear: if the relief trade gets fully priced before ETF demand turns, the bounce can stall even with crude lower.
The next break comes from follow-through, not headlines
Bitcoin traders now have a cleaner setup, but not a clean one.
The first level is psychological and mechanical: can BTC stay above $65,500 after the initial deal-driven surge? The second is macro: does Brent keep losing the geopolitical premium, or does crude stabilize and revive the same rate concerns that pressured crypto last week?
The third is political. The agreement has been announced by major parties, but the full text remains unreleased. Trump said the Strait of Hormuz will reopen on Friday upon signing. Until that happens, markets are trading the relief before they have the signed document.
That gap is where the next move lives. If shipping lanes reopen as stated and oil remains under pressure, risk assets keep their tailwind. If the deal details disappoint or institutional crypto flows remain weak, bitcoin’s two-week high may look more like a relief spike than the start of a durable recovery.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- Bitcoin’s rebound shows traders quickly shifted back into risk assets after geopolitical tensions eased.
- Falling oil prices suggest markets are removing the Hormuz disruption premium from energy prices.
- The broad rally across crypto, stocks, and futures signals improving investor sentiment beyond bitcoin alone.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.












