Why Did Bitcoin Reverse Saturday’s Losses?
Bitcoin recovered sharply after President Donald Trump said a peace agreement with Iran and several Middle Eastern countries had been largely negotiated, easing pressure on risk assets after a steep sell-off earlier in the session.
The token had fallen about 4% from late Friday into early Saturday, touching nearly $74,000 before reversing. After Trump’s announcement, bitcoin moved back toward $76,700 and briefly tested the $77,000 area, recovering the losses recorded earlier in the day.
Trump said the agreement was still subject to finalization between the United States, Iran, and other countries involved in the talks. The countries named in the negotiation process included Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain.
The market reaction reflected a rapid repricing of geopolitical risk. Crypto had been trading under pressure as the conflict weighed on global energy markets, raised inflation concerns, and pushed investors away from higher-risk assets. The announcement did not remove those risks entirely, but it gave traders a short-term reason to cover downside exposure.
Why Does the Strait of Hormuz Matter for Crypto?
The most important market detail in Trump’s announcement was the planned reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. The waterway is a critical route for global oil shipments, and its closure had intensified pressure on energy prices during the conflict.
Higher oil prices can feed into inflation expectations, complicate central bank policy, and reduce appetite for speculative assets. For crypto, that creates a difficult backdrop because bitcoin and ether remain sensitive to liquidity conditions, dollar strength, Treasury yields, and broader risk sentiment.
Crude prices eased after the announcement, with WTI falling to about $96 and Brent crude dropping to around $103. Even after that move, both benchmarks remained sharply above pre-conflict levels, leaving energy markets a continued source of macro pressure.
The reopening of the strait would reduce one of the clearest immediate risks for global markets. For bitcoin, the issue is less direct energy exposure and more the effect of oil shocks on inflation, rates, and investor positioning.
Investor Takeaway
Bitcoin’s rebound was driven by geopolitical relief, not a clear change in its underlying trend. A durable recovery still depends on whether energy prices continue to ease and whether the peace agreement is finalized without renewed disruption.
What Does the Move Say About Market Positioning?
The speed of the rebound shows how exposed crypto markets had become to Middle East headlines. Bitcoin’s move from a 5-week low near $74,250 to the $76,700-$77,000 zone points to short-covering and renewed demand for risk exposure after traders priced in a lower probability of further escalation.
Total crypto market capitalization recovered by roughly $75 billion after the announcement, showing that the move was not limited to bitcoin. The broader market response suggests traders treated the peace update as a macro event rather than a bitcoin-specific catalyst.
Still, the recovery did not erase the wider technical weakness. Bitcoin remains below the failed $82,000 resistance area and is still far below its October peak. The rebound restored part of the weekend decline, but it did not confirm a trend reversal.
The 50-day exponential moving average near $77,000 became the first short-term test after the announcement. Bitcoin briefly reached that area before easing back toward $76,800, leaving the market near a technical level that may separate a relief bounce from a stronger recovery attempt.
Can the Rebound Hold?
The immediate test is whether the peace agreement moves from announcement to finalization. Trump said final details were still being discussed and would be announced shortly. Until those details are confirmed, markets may continue to react sharply to headlines from Washington, Tehran, and regional capitals.
For crypto traders, the key variables remain energy prices, dollar strength, Treasury yields, and whether risk appetite improves across equities and other speculative assets. A confirmed reopening of the Strait of Hormuz would reduce one major source of pressure, but bitcoin still faces resistance from weak momentum and recent failures to break higher.
The conflict has already left a mark on the market. Bitcoin’s drop to a 5-week low showed that investors were willing to cut risk exposure quickly when geopolitical and energy risks intensified. The rebound after Trump’s announcement shows the opposite side of the same trade: when escalation risk falls, crypto can recover quickly because positioning is already defensive.
For now, the move is a relief rally tied to de-escalation. A stronger bullish setup would require bitcoin to reclaim resistance near $82,000, stabilize ETF and spot-market demand, and show that buyers are returning for reasons beyond geopolitical headline relief.
