
Brent crude oil is trading like a geopolitical asset again, forcing Bitcoin back into a macro test it has yet to fully resolve.
Oil prices rose for the third time in a row as the deepening US-Israeli conflict with Iran revived fears of disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime chokepoint that handles roughly a fifth of global oil consumption flows and significant LNG traffic.
According to data from Oilprice.com, Brent rose more than $3 to around $80.9 per barrel after crossing $82 intraday, its highest level since January 2025, while WTI hovered around $73.8.
At the same time, the New York Fed carried out On March 2, $3.0 billion in overnight repos were backed by Treasury collateral, temporarily adding reserves to the banking system. Overnight reverse repos totaled $0.627 billion that day, yielding a net effect of approximately +$2.373 billion in temporary reserve support.
These two developments, a renewed oil shock and a small but closely watched reserve injection, are colliding in Bitcoin.
Data from CryptoSlate shows that the top digital asset was trading around $66,801 at the time of writing, after a volatile period in which it fell to a low of $63,000 before bouncing back to $70,000.
For crypto traders, the question is no longer just whether war will lift the oil. At issue is whether higher energy costs keep inflation persistent enough to delay rate cuts, or whether repeated liquidity support from the Fed begins to offset some of that pressure.
Oil’s rise reflects logistical risks, not just supply
The market doesn’t just react to barrels. It also responds to the infrastructure that moves them.
Reuters reported that insurers have withdrawn coverage for ships operating in the conflict zone, prompting some tankers and container ships to divert or avoid the area.
That matters because once insurers step back, the costs of disruption will be greater than the value of the lost barrels themselves.
As a result, delivery schedules become less reliable, freight costs rise, refining margins may widen and regional shortages become more likely.
In that climate, the war premium is not limited to the raw supply. It extends to transportation, insurance and timing.
Iran increased that bounty even further on March 2 by declaring the Strait of Hormuz closed and threatening to attack ships attempting to pass through.
Whether Tehran can fully enforce such a threat remains uncertain, but the market does not need certainty to respond. It only needs to assign a higher probability to a disruptive outcome.
So even periodic attacks, temporary diversions, or higher insurance costs can keep crude oil prices high as the market begins to price not just the missing barrels but also the disrupted movement.
This is especially important because the conflict is emerging at a time when many basic forecasts had pointed to a relatively comfortable oil market.
Before the latest escalation, expectations for 2026 were still anchored in the view that supply growth would exceed demand growth.
The US Energy Information Administration projected Brent would average $58 per barrel in 2026 and $53 in 2027, based on rising inventories and stronger production. The International Energy Agency outlined against a similar backdrop, with demand growth of approximately 850,000 barrels per day in 2026, against supply growth of approximately 2.4 million barrels per day.
On paper, these figures indicate an oversupply. In practice, oversupply does not eliminate the risk of chokepoints.
The marginal barrel still has to move from producer to consumer, and the Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most important transit points. A comfortable global balance could still hit a logistics bottleneck if a major shipping artery is threatened.
That’s why analysts have started moving away from single-price forecasts to broader scenario bands.
For context, Bernstein raised its 2026 Brent forecast from $65 to $80, while severe escalation scenarios could push prices as high as $150 per barrel if shipping restrictions increase.
The Fed’s repo action is more of a signal than a sum
Against this backdrop, the Fed’s March 2 repurchase operation attracted attention because it suggested that even as inflation risks rise, policymakers remain alert to financing conditions.
The $3 billion overnight repo was not a policy change. It was a routine money market instrument under temporary open market operations, intended to temporarily replenish reserves and help keep the Fed Funds rate within the target range of 3.50% to 3.75%.
Same-day reverse repo activity partially offset the reserve injection, leaving a net addition of approximately $2.373 billion.
That scale is small relative to the Fed’s overall balance sheet and the banking system’s existing reserve levels. It is not quantitative easing, nor does it represent a broader attempt to ease monetary policy. However, it is market plumbing.
Yet financial markets rarely respond solely to absolute size. They also respond to pattern recognition. A single action can be considered routine. A range of these could indicate that liquidity conditions are becoming tight enough to require repeated intervention.
That’s where Bitcoin becomes difficult to classify.
The flagship digital asset tends to trade through multiple stories at once. It can behave as a hedge against fiat downgrades, as a high-beta risk asset that suffers when real rates rise and the dollar strengthens, or as a liquidity-sensitive instrument that benefits when central bank actions alleviate funding stress.
At the moment, those stories are going in different directions.
Higher oil prices point to firmer inflation and a potentially slower path to rate cuts. That usually weighs on speculative and duration-sensitive assets, including crypto.
But if geopolitical stress pushes funding markets toward tighter conditions and the Fed responds by repeatedly easing these conditions, the liquidity environment could become somewhat more supportive for Bitcoin even without a formal easing cycle.
The crypto market structure still looks fragile
Bitcoin’s current price action suggests that investors have not yet decided which of these macro channels are more important.
Wintermute on March 3 pointed out that the US-Israeli attack on Iran over the weekend triggered an immediate risk exit in an already vulnerable market.
The company said institutional over-the-counter activity remained subdued even as spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded more than $1 billion in inflows late last week, ending a five-week streak of outflows.
This combination is notable because it suggests that demand for ETFs alone has not been enough to restore conviction.
Bitcoin is still down 45% from its all-time high, and the recovery from recent lows has not yet brought back the deeper institutional bid that characterized trading when prices were between $85,000 and $95,000.
Essentially, that active participation is no longer in effect at the current price level.
Options markets are also showing a more defensive tone. DVOL, the measure of implied volatility, rose from the 30s and 40s to around 55, implying daily swings of roughly 2.5% to 3%.
At the same time, demand remains high while BTC rallies continue to face selling pressure due to repeated profit-taking, pushing the recovery close to the $70,000 level.
BRN analyst Timothy Misir echoed that sentiment in a statement CryptoSlaat, noting that the market may have already absorbed a large portion of the foreclosures.
According to him, during the February 5-6 capitulation, 89,000 Bitcoins were sent to exchanges at a loss within 24 hours, causing the price of BTC to briefly fall below $60,000.
However, loss-driven inflows into the exchange have steadily declined since then, with the latest Iran-related sell-off failing to lead to a similar spike in inflows from short-term holders into the exchanges.
According to Misir, this suggests that weaker hands may have already been shaken out and that the latest decline was not caused by a widespread panic outbreak.
Bitcoin’s next move could depend on which macro channel wins
In light of the above, Bitcoin remains within a narrow, uncomfortable range, with the next move likely depending on which macro transmission channel becomes dominant.
The first is the inflation channel. If the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed, or if repeated disruptions keep freight and insurance costs high for several weeks or months, oil could remain closer to the low $80s than the mid-$50s or low $60s previously forecast.
In that case, central banks would not only have to deal with higher energy prices, but also with second-order effects in the form of transport costs, services inflation and inflation expectations.
That would make it harder to achieve rate cuts, and that environment would likely remain a headwind for Bitcoin.
The second is the liquidity channel. If geopolitical stress begins to tighten money market conditions and the Fed responds with more frequent repurchase operations or other reserve support measures, Bitcoin could start to act less like a pure risk asset and more like a barometer of simpler financial plumbing.
That wouldn’t necessarily mean an immediate recovery, but it could ease some of the macro pressure if investors come to believe that the Fed is keeping systemic stress in check even as policy rates remain restrictive.
For the time being, the inflation channel appears to be weighing more heavily. Traditional macro signals indicate stress. Gold remains in good demand. Oil volatility has increased sharply. Stocks have weakened.
While Bitcoin is more resilient than some traders might have expected given the geopolitical backdrop, it still looks cautious rather than strong.
That does not rule out the possibility of a later reversal. If the conflict continues, traditional safe havens become overcrowded and support for reserves becomes more persistent, Bitcoin could be tested again under its digital-gold thesis.
