Bitcoin is showing strength as prices hover above $69,000, with slight gains bucking broader market jitters amid the escalating Iran war.

The cryptocurrency rose slightly as a sell-off in stocks, triggered by Iran’s aggressive move to seal off the Strait of Hormuz, helped gold higher.

BTC climbed to intraday peaks near $69,500 on Wednesday, with on-chain data showing sustained accumulation by long-term holders despite the chaos.

Bitcoin eyes $70k as Iran war rattles markets

Bitcoin’s price hovered above $69,000 in early trading on Wednesday, despite broader concerns around a prolonged US-Iran conflict.

Bulls face a challenge around the critical $70,000 level.

As the war rattles markets, stocks are shedding the most gains.

“Korea just lost ~11% of its stock market value in one morning. Japan is down ~4%. [and] Hong Kong down ~3%,” crypto analyst Lark Davis posted on X. “Billions gone before your alarm went off. Makes you want to roll over and go back to sleep,” he added.

Korea’s stock market dropped after Iran threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, and analysts say US stocks could follow suit.

This is despite President Donald Trump declaring that the Navy will escort tankers through the Strait if necessary.

“No matter what, the United States will ensure the FREE FLOW of ENERGY to the WORLD,” he posted on Truth Social.

Bitcoin price forecast

Despite the gloom, Bitcoin is looking to mirror the surge in precious metals.

As spot gold advanced to above $5,170 per ounce, Bitcoin gained from $66,200 to highs of $69,500.

Bulls are attempting to cement the uptick as prices hover around the psychological level as of early trading on Wednesday.

Gains have analysts noting recent price movement compared to other assets.

“In the last few days the S&P, gold, and KOSPI all tanked but Bitcoin didn’t even flinch. Something has shifted,” JAN3 CEO Samson Mow said via X.

He notes the asset may show further decoupling.

As noted, Bitcoin’s grip below $70,000 persists despite war shockwaves rippling through global assets.

Escalating oil shocks may drive further rotation from equities into gold and BTC.

If bulls stabilise momentum, an easing in selling pressure could invigorate capital flows and allow for a short-term recovery rally.

This outlook aligns with on-chain data showing that Bitcoin’s short-term holders are not selling.

CryptoQuant analysts say “sell-side pressure from recent buyers is fading” and “panic is being replaced by patience, or at least exhaustion.”

In this case, BTC could retest multi-week highs and eye a breakout to the $72,000-$78,000 region.

However, as investors brace for prolonged Middle East tensions, the cryptocurrency may yet face its sternest test.

Notably, a de-escalation could cap gains and see a fresh retreat to $67,000 or under $65,000.

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