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Bitcoin Price Passes $75,000 as Iran War Turns It From ‘Digital Gold’ Into Geopolitical Settlement Bet

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Bitcoin Price Passes $75,000 as Iran War Turns It From ‘Digital Gold’ Into Geopolitical Settlement Bet

Bitcoin price jumped past $75,000 on Wednesday as traders recalibrated what the asset represents in the wake of the Iran conflict and an unusually stretched derivatives market. Price action, positioning data, and a real-world test of bitcoin as a settlement rail now point to a market that values the token as more than a volatile wager on tech risk.

Bitcoin price traded around $74,000 to $75,000 on April 15, extending a rebound that began after a February low near $60,000. The move leaves the asset up roughly 23% from that trough and about 3% on the week, even as broader macro and geopolitical headlines remain tense.

Spot markets now face stiff resistance in the $75,000 to $76,000 band, a zone several analysts flag as the ceiling of a two‑month consolidation range.

Short term, traders frame the outlook around a simple line in the sand. If bitcoin price can hold above support near $71,000 and secure a clean break above $76,000, momentum models start to point toward a run into the high‑$70,000s or even $80,000 over the coming weeks, according to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data.

Failure at that band keeps the range intact and invites another pullback toward $70,000 and the low‑$60,000s where the last leg of the rally started.

Derivatives flash bottoming pattern for bitcoin price

Beneath the spot chart, futures markets tell a story of persistent skepticism. The 30‑day average funding rate on perpetual swaps has remained negative for 46 straight days, matching the stretch of negative funding seen near the late‑2022 bear market bottom, according to research firm K33. 

That means traders who hold long positions in perpetual futures have collected fees from shorts, even as price has drifted higher.

K33 Head of Research Vetle Lunde notes that similar regimes — rising prices, climbing open interest, and negative funding across daily, weekly, and monthly windows — have appeared near consolidation lows that later resolved higher. 

The firm argues that this backdrop now raises the odds of a classic short squeeze if price breaks out, as heavily positioned bears scramble to cover. Only two periods in recent history, March to May 2020 and June to August 2021, have seen longer runs of negative 30‑day funding.

Iran conflict shifts the narrative

The Iran war has become the crucible for a new narrative about what bitcoin is and why investors hold it. Since U.S. and Israeli airstrikes began in late February, bitcoin price has gained about 12% while the S&P 500 has slipped and gold has sold off, a pattern that jars with the old view of the token as a high‑beta extension of tech stocks. 

Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan argues that markets are now valuing bitcoin as two instruments at once.

The first leg of that thesis remains the familiar “digital gold” pitch, with bitcoin competing for a slice of a store‑of‑value market measured in tens of trillions of dollars. 

The second leg, which Hougan says investors have long treated as remote, is an out‑of‑the‑money call option on bitcoin evolving into a working currency and settlement layer. In that framing, conflict does not simply add volatility to a risk asset; it raises the probability that value routes through neutral rails outside direct control of any single state.

A live bitcoin test in the Strait of Hormuz

Iran’s decision to demand bitcoin tolls from ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz has turned that abstract option into a live, if imperfect, example. The country announced a $1‑per‑barrel fee in bitcoin for crude shipments, a flow that could reach roughly $20 million in daily settlement volume at current prices. That move places BTC and the bitcoin price in the middle of physical trade tied to one of the world’s most strategic chokepoints.

Hougan links this shift back to the weaponization of traditional payment rails, including the removal of Russia from the SWIFT network in 2022, which a French official likened to a financial nuclear strike. In a world where sanctions and correspondent banking are tools of statecraft, a permissionless network that clears value without central control looks different to both allies and non‑aligned states.

All this underpins the current Bitcoin price push toward $75,000, where charts and geopolitics now intersect on the same line. At the time of writing, the bitcoin price is $74,860.

This post Bitcoin Price Passes $75,000 as Iran War Turns It From ‘Digital Gold’ Into Geopolitical Settlement Bet first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

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