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I just noticed that Bitcoin dropped to $63,000 over the weekend when the Iran-Israel conflict escalated. It briefly rebounded to $65,000 but couldn't hold and fell back to $64,700. While traditional markets were closed, crypto continued to move, absorbing all the risk sell-off. It's interesting to see how Bitcoin acts as a safety valve when the end is near for risk assets. Traders sell here because it's the only thing open 24/7. NATO, China, and Turkey called for de-escalation, but the market had already reacted. What caught my attention is that despite the serious headlines, Bitcoin didn't collapse further. It suggests there is less active selling pressure than it seems, just limited liquidity over the weekend. For traders, this means volatility risk until the main markets open.