Bitcoin is struggling to live up to its “digital gold” reputation as the Strait of Hormuz crisis pushes oil prices sharply higher. Instead of acting as a safe haven, Bitcoin is increasingly moving in step with risk assets—showing a strong 0.68 correlation with crude oil.
That shift suggests something important: right now, Bitcoin is behaving less like a hedge and more like a macro-sensitive asset tied to global liquidity conditions.
Key takeaways
Rising correlation: Bitcoin’s link with oil has jumped to 0.68, far above its historical norm below 0.3
Oil shock: Brent Crude Oil is hovering near $110+ levels amid supply disruption fears
Critical level: Bitcoin must hold the $65,000 zone to avoid deeper downside pressure toward $58,000
Why rising oil is weighing on Bitcoin
The crisis around the Strait of Hormuz has tightened global energy supply, pushing oil sharply higher. With nearly 20% of global supply flowing through the region, markets are reacting fast.
Higher oil prices feed directly into inflation expectations. And that’s where the problem starts for Bitcoin.
If oil stays elevated around $110, inflation is likely to remain sticky. That keeps interest rates higher for longer, which reduces global liquidity—something Bitcoin tends to rely on.
So instead of benefiting from “geopolitical panic,” Bitcoin is reacting to the knock-on effects: tighter financial conditions and reduced risk appetite.
A shift in how Bitcoin is trading
Normally, geopolitical tension supports the “Bitcoin as digital gold” narrative. But this time, the data tells a different story.
Bitcoin isn’t rallying on fear—it’s reacting to liquidity stress.
Rising energy prices also hit both consumers and miners, adding extra pressure to the ecosystem. That combination makes it harder for BTC to sustain upside momentum while oil remains elevated.
What the market is watching
Despite the volatility, large investors haven’t stepped away. Wallets holding 1,000–10,000 BTC continue to accumulate in the $65,000–$70,000 range, suggesting longer-term confidence is still intact.
At the same time, institutional infrastructure continues to expand, with major financial players pushing deeper into crypto products. But in the short term, price action is still being driven by macro conditions—not long-term narratives.
The key levels
For now, Bitcoin remains in a tight macro-driven range:
Support: $65,000
Resistance: $72,000
A clean move back above $72,000 while oil stays elevated would revive the “decoupling” narrative. But losing $65,000 would signal that macro pressure is taking full control.
Bottom line
Bitcoin is currently caught between two identities:
a long-term “digital gold” story, and a short-term macro asset reacting to energy-driven inflation.
Until oil stabilises or Bitcoin breaks its correlation with risk assets, the market is treating it less like a hedge—and more like a leveraged reflection of global liquidity conditions.



