🚨✨️ Bitcoin Went Up During an Active War. Let's Talk About That.



In the first days of US-Israel strikes on Iran, Bitcoin outperformed equities, held pace with gold, and absorbed panic selling. Here's what that actually means.

Saturday night, when US and Israeli forces began striking targets across Iran, Bitcoin did what it almost always does in the first hour of a major shock it sold off. That part was predictable. Crypto trades 24/7, traditional markets don't, and when geopolitical risk spikes on a weekend, Bitcoin becomes the most liquid instrument available for anyone who needs to move fast. Jake Ostrovskis at Wintermute said it directly: BTC was acting as a proxy for broader risk being the only market open.

What happened next was less predictable.

By Monday afternoon, Bitcoin had not only erased its weekend losses it was up more than 5%, trading around $69,120. The S&P 500 opened down 1%. Nasdaq down 1.3%. Oil had surged 11.5% on Hormuz supply fears. Gold added 2.5%. Across every major trillion-dollar asset class in those first days of an active multination conflict, Bitcoin quietly posted the strongest performance.

That sentence deserves to sit for a moment.

This isn't the same as Bitcoin being a safe haven. One week doesn't rewrite a thesis. The asset is still down more than 40% from its October peak, and the longer trend since then has consistently favored gold. But there's a specific and important distinction between a long term underperformance narrative and short term behavior during acute fear and in the acute fear window, Bitcoin's behavior surprised almost everyone.

The structural shift worth watching is the ETF layer. In previous conflict cycles Russia-Ukraine in 2022, Israel-Hamas in 2023, the June 2025 escalation exchange inflows spiked during the headline shock and then normalized. The pattern held, but the recovery took time and the dips were sharper. This time, institutional buyers through ETF vehicles appear to be absorbing panic selling in near real time.

That changes the drawdown profile meaningfully. When a large enough base of capital treats every geopolitical dip as an accumulation window rather than a reason to exit, the floor on those dips gets higher.

On Hyperliquid crypto's round the clock trading venue that's increasingly functioning as a 24/7 preview of traditional market open oil perpetuals jumped 5% to $70.6 per barrel over the weekend, gold rose 1.3%, and Bitcoin reversed losses to gain 2.3% before traditional markets even opened.

The weekend price action was essentially a live rehearsal for Monday's session, and Bitcoin's trajectory in that rehearsal called the move correctly.

The macro risks from here are real and shouldn't be dismissed. If the Hormuz disruption persists, oil above $85 sustained for weeks starts feeding into inflation expectations, which feeds into Fed posture, which compresses liquidity and that's historically where Bitcoin struggles, not during the initial fear spike but during the prolonged macro tightening that follows. That transmission mechanism matters more than any single session's performance.

But for five days of active war between major powers, Bitcoin's behavior relative to equities, gold, and oil told a more interesting story than the consensus narrative coming in would have suggested.

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