Geopolitics has a habit of showing up uninvited to the crypto party. This time, it arrived with missiles.
Iranian strikes on the Al Azraq base in Jordan on July 18 killed two American service members and left one missing. The US responded with airstrikes of its own, breaking a fragile ceasefire that had briefly cooled tensions in the Strait of Hormuz region. What followed in financial markets was predictable: investors reached for the exits on anything that looked remotely risky.
Bitcoin, which had been trading near $65,500 just before the escalation, retreated toward the $64,000 level as the exchange of attacks intensified. That is a roughly 2% pullback in a matter of sessions, not catastrophic by crypto standards, but the direction of travel told the real story.
Why a military conflict in the Middle East moves Bitcoin
The Strait of Hormuz is the chokepoint through which a significant share of global oil supply passes. Any credible threat to that corridor sends oil prices higher, which in turn raises inflation expectations, which tightens the financial conditions that risk assets depend on. The chain reaction from military strike to Bitcoin price is indirect, but it is real and it is consistent.
The CoinDesk 20 Index, which tracks the broader crypto market beyond just Bitcoin, dropped as much as 2.9% during the period of heightened tensions in early July, before the Al Azraq attack pushed things further. Ether followed Bitcoin lower, with most major tokens moving in the same direction.
A ceasefire that did not hold
A ceasefire arrangement had been in place covering the Strait of Hormuz region, giving markets a brief window of relative calm. The July 18 strikes on Al Azraq shattered that arrangement. When ceasefires collapse, the uncertainty premium that markets had been discounting comes rushing back.
Bitcoin’s retreat from $65,500 toward $64,000 was not driven by any on-chain event, regulatory development, or protocol news. It was purely a function of traders reassessing how much risk they wanted to carry into a weekend where the geopolitical situation could deteriorate further overnight.
What this means for crypto investors navigating the conflict
If oil prices continue rising as a result of Strait of Hormuz disruptions, the macro environment becomes genuinely more difficult for crypto. Higher oil means higher inflation, which means central banks keep rates elevated for longer, which means the cheap money conditions that fueled the last bull run stay out of reach.
Crypto ETF inflows, which had been a bright spot for the market heading into mid-July, suggest that some institutional buyers are treating the dip as an opportunity rather than a warning sign. That buyer conviction underneath $64,000 will be a key level to watch.
Bitcoin’s price behavior during geopolitical shocks has historically been short-lived in its negative impact, provided the shock does not become a sustained crisis. The 2020 US-Iran confrontation following the Soleimani strike briefly rattled markets before crypto resumed its upward trajectory within weeks.
