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Has Bitcoin just become the new global currency?
I’m not asking this question out of thin air, but because the biggest news this morning is that the Strait of Hormuz accepts Bitcoin only.
This is not a science fiction story.
This is what’s happening today, right now, in the narrowest maritime passage in the world.
During the ceasefire Iran announced with the United States, Tehran informed shipping companies of a single condition with no room for negotiation:
Any oil tanker that wants to pass through the Strait of Hormuz must pay one dollar per barrel of oil it has on board.
But the payment? Bitcoin only. And in seconds.
A fully loaded giant tanker could end up with a bill of up to two million dollars — paid digitally, with no bank, no intermediary, and no trace.
Empty tankers cross for free.
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Why Bitcoin specifically?
The reason is simple and profound at the same time.
Western sanctions have made the dollar a weapon.
Any dollar transfer can be traced, frozen, and confiscated within seconds.
Chinese remittances in yuan are an alternative, but they go through banks that have accounts in the West.
Bitcoin?
No central bank can stop it.
No government can freeze it.
No sanctions can erase it.
Iran found in it what the early inventors found in it: a financial system that doesn’t need anyone’s permission.
But what’s striking here is deeper than the fees.
The strait that carries one-fifth of the world’s oil supply has started accepting payment in a currency issued by no country.
This is a historic precedent.
The first time in modern history that a state imposes sovereign fees on an international passage and demands payment in a digital asset entirely outside the Western financial system.
And the markets noticed immediately.
Bitcoin jumped above 73,000 dollars after the news was released.
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This event raises a much bigger question than the Strait of Hormuz:
Are confrontation-prone countries starting to build a parallel trade system based on digital assets instead of the dollar?
Russia used crypto to get around sanctions.
Iran is now officially imposing it on one of the most important maritime routes.
China pays in yuan.
While the petrodollar
That system born in the 1970s when America linked the sale of oil to its currency
is facing a challenge it has never faced before.
The investment lesson from all of this:
Bitcoin has entered a completely new phase.
It’s no longer just a safe haven for individuals seeking protection from inflation.
It has become a tool that countries use in environments where traditional financial systems don’t operate.
This is a qualitative shift in the nature of demand for Bitcoin,
and what investors need to take seriously.
Geopolitics is no longer far from your investment portfolio.
What’s your take? Are we truly facing the beginning of the end of the dollar’s dominance in oil trade?
$BTC $ETH $XTIUSD #OilEdgesHigher #CryptoMarketsDipSlightly #MorganStanleyLaunchesSpotBitcoinETF