Bitcoin’s brief weekend rally lost its footing when a sudden resumption of military hostilities between Israel and Iran caused a broad rotation away from risky investments.
The geopolitical escalation, which defied explicit diplomatic pressure from Washington, sent global energy benchmarks soaring and stock markets falling, leaving BTC to defend a highly vulnerable $60,000 baseline.
Data from CryptoSlate showed Bitcoin retreating to around $63,316 at the time of writing, after hitting an intra-day high of $64,128 during a weekend short squeeze.


This reversal underlines the crypto market’s vulnerability to a mix of institutional deleveraging, artificial intelligence trading fatigue, and rising macro fears.
The friction between Israel and Iran defies Washington
The macroeconomic shock came from a sudden collapse of the two-month ceasefire that had paused direct military confrontation between Israel and Iran since April.
Over the weekend, Israeli forces reportedly carried out a series of targeted airstrikes in central and western Iran, hitting key infrastructure including a petrochemical facility in Isfahan, in addition to sites in Tehran and Tabriz.
According to reports, these attacks followed a barrage of about ten Iranian ballistic missiles fired into northern Israel on Sunday evening, which the Israeli military said had largely been intercepted or landed in uninhabited areas.
Tehran framed that rocket launch in direct retaliation for an earlier Israeli operation in southern Beirut that killed two people and injured 20 in a militant command center.
The renewed violence is complicating ongoing diplomatic efforts led by US President Donald Trump, who recently suggested a comprehensive peace deal was nearing completion.
Trump publicly expressed frustration at the unfolding events, explicitly distancing his government from the Israeli Prime Minister’s tactical decisions, stating:
“I’m in charge. He’s not in charge.”
In Tehran, the rhetoric has also hardened. Chairman of the Iranian Parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf rejected the prospect of an immediate ceasefire.
He argued that existing naval blockades and tacit U.S. support for Israeli operations have effectively turned U.S. assets in the region into legitimate military targets.
Contagion between assets and the energy shock
The immediate financial fallout focused on energy markets, reversing a week-end sell-off based on hopes for regional de-escalation.
According to oilprice.comBrent crude futures rose 4.47% to $97.15 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate rose 4.50% to $94.61.
Although crude is still below its March peak of $120, prices have risen nearly 60% since the broader conflict began in late February.
This shows traders are aggressively pricing in the risk of disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial maritime chokepoint that handles about 20% of the world’s daily liquefied natural gas and oil transit.
Meanwhile, this commodity shock led to an immediate defensive stance in traditional stocks.
Asian markets absorbed the first wave of selling, punctuated by South Korea’s KOSPI index, which plunged more than 8% as capital fled to so-called safe havens. The Kobeissi letter reported that the South Korean stock market was halted due to this drastic drop.
A ‘hollow’ pressure on the crypto derivatives market
For Bitcoin, this geopolitical turbulence came just as the asset attempted to reach a technical bottom following last week’s punishing 16% drawdown, which briefly pushed the top crypto below the $60,000 threshold.
CryptoSlate previously reported that the world’s largest cryptocurrency has faced intense structural headwinds of late.
The pressure was driven by an outflow of more than $4 billion from US exchange-traded funds and weaker market sentiment after Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) conducted its first Bitcoin sale since 2022.
So when BTC spot prices fell below the $60,000 threshold last week, bearish speculators aggressively positioned themselves for a deeper downturn.
However, when the market unexpectedly turned higher over the weekend, these late shorts were unwound with force. Remarkably, CryptoSlate previously reported that BTC was creating a short-heavy setup that could fuel the uptrend.
However, leading market analysts caution against interpreting the weekend price action as a sustainable recovery, according to crypto research firm 10x Research. to report:
“After last week’s sharp sell-off, Bitcoin is in technical oversold territory, and a brief bounce early this week seems likely. But don’t confuse a relief rally with a recovery.”
Axel Adler, analyst at on-chain data provider CryptoQuant, noted that the internal mechanisms of the derivatives market indicate a serious lack of fundamental demand.
Adler highlighted that while the spot price recovered about 4% from its low, total open interest on futures actually fell 6%, from $1.65 billion to $1.55 billion.
In view of this, Adler concluded that the upward price movement was entirely mechanical, as financing rates remained uniformly positive throughout this period. He explained:
“The combination of a higher price, lower open interest and positive financing means that leverage is reduced.”
Adler further classified the weekend action as a deleveraging rebound, driven by short-covering rather than fresh capital deployed into leveraged long positions.
Without new demand in the spot market, Adler warned, the market risks a quick return to the $60,000 support zone.
That technical vulnerability is reflected by the deteriorating retail psychology. Joao Wedson, CEO of analytics firm Alphractal, pointed out that current social metrics categorize the market environment into ‘Extreme Fear’ with a heavy bearish bias.


Noting that panic-induced Google searches for crypto are on the rise again, Wedson warns investors to brace for a highly volatile trading week as geopolitical realities collide with an already depleted digital asset market.
The result is a market caught between two tensions. Short hedging has lifted Bitcoin off last week’s lows, but renewed conflict in the Middle East has pushed oil higher and weakened the broader risk backdrop.
Bitcoin’s next step will depend on whether buyers return with enough strength to turn the recovery into a sustainable one. Without that, the weekend bounce risks becoming another break before traders retest the $60,000 mark.
