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Crypto markets rally as Iran risk meets protocol upgrades
Crypto caught a bid on Tuesday, even as traders watched a widening US-Iran standoff and a jump in oil. Bitcoin held the line near $70,000, while Ethereum finally pushed cleanly out of a long down channel. Meanwhile, the tone improved on Capitol Hill and in corporate treasuries, which helped the rally feel less like a reflex bounce.
However, the price action still looked jumpy. Traders kept one eye on inflation risk from crude above $103 a barrel. They kept the other on technical levels that have squandered more breakouts than they have rewarded.
Bitcoin stalks a breakout, but sentiment stays sour
Bitcoin hovered around the top of an ascending triangle and pressed resistance near $72,500 to $72,600. Therefore, chart traders focused on a clean push above $74,100, which would open the way to the mid-$70,000s and a retest of $80,000.
Yet the mood remained defensive. The Fear and Greed Index printed 12, while RSI sat near 38, close to oversold. Meanwhile, the broader crypto market capitalisation stood near $2.49 trillion, down about 0.8% over 24 hours, which undercut the cheer.
Support did not look theoretical. Buyers defended $69,800, with $68,450 around the 200-day moving average. In addition, traders cited $68,200 near a 0.618 Fibonacci level as the next stop if $70,000 breaks with force.
Still, institutions supplied some ballast. MicroStrategy’s latest $1 billion purchase, 13,927 bitcoin, kept its accumulation story rolling. Meanwhile, spot bitcoin ETFs took in roughly $786 million last week, which hinted that allocators still buy dips when they feel paid to wait.
Ethereum leads, while altcoins chase
Ethereum outperformed after breaking out of a multi-year descending channel. Consequently, technicians pointed to $3,400 as a plausible upside target if the breakout holds through the next pullback.
Elsewhere, the tape looked mixed rather than manic. Chainlink tightened into a coiling pattern that traders often treat as a volatility spring. Hyperliquid approached a familiar ceiling near $46, which could either cap momentum or, if cleared, trigger a wave of stop-driven buying.
Meanwhile, protocol headlines did their usual job of creating pockets of heat. Pi Network’s major upgrade helped sentiment in its corner of the market, although liquidity and follow-through will matter more than announcements by the end of the week.
Rules, risks and the Washington drumbeat
In Washington, the Clarity Act inched forward towards a Senate markup, while stablecoin talk kept bleeding into broader market structure debates. Therefore, traders treated the regulatory news as a slow-moving tailwind rather than a tradable catalyst.
However, warnings landed too. The American Bankers Association flagged interest-bearing stablecoins as a potential threat to deposits, with a cited risk of up to $6.6 trillion in flight. Abroad, the UK moved towards a 2026 rulebook, with a carve-out approach for parts of DeFi, which suggested a more segmented regime.
Enforcement remained active. The US Justice Department opened a $40 million fund for OneCoin victims, while South Korea fined Coinone about $3.5 million over AML failures. Consequently, the compliance premium for reputable venues should persist.
Geopolitics hits crude, then spills into crypto
Geopolitics did not fade into the background. Oil traded above $103 a barrel after Donald Trump’s Iran blockade comments, which fed inflation chatter and threatened risk assets. Meanwhile, traders linked any sustained crude spike to rate-cut delays, which tends to pinch crypto via tighter financial conditions.
Bitcoin’s $70,000 zone became the market’s mood ring. If it holds, dip buyers can argue that crypto has learned to live with headlines. If it cracks, the next bids may sit closer to the high-$60,000s, where longer-term moving averages wait.
Company moves and weird corners of the tape
Corporate and partnership headlines provided colour, if not always clear valuation impact. Nexo signed on as a digital asset partner for Argentina’s national football team in Latin America. Ondo sought a path with the SEC for Ethereum-based tokenised securities efforts, while Anchorpoint prepared a HKDAP stablecoin push. Kraken, meanwhile, said it rejected a ransom demand tied to an extortion attempt affecting about 2,000 accounts.
By the numbers
- Bitcoin: resistance $72,500 to $72,600; next $74,100; key support $69,800
- Deeper supports: $68,450 (200-day MA), $68,200 (0.618 Fib)
- Market cap: about $2.49tn, down roughly 0.8% in 24 hours
- Sentiment: Fear and Greed Index 12; BTC RSI about 38
- Flows: spot BTC ETFs about $786m inflows last week; MicroStrategy bought 13,927 BTC for $1bn
Key takeaways
- If BTC clears $74,100 on strong volume, bulls can press for $75,000 and then $80,000.
- If BTC loses $69,800, expect fast tests of $68,450 and $68,200.
- ETH’s channel break matters most on the retest, not the initial burst.
- Oil above $100 raises the odds of macro-driven whipsaws in crypto.
- Regulation remains a grind higher, yet enforcement keeps punishing weak controls.


