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Bitcoin pump wen? đ¤ Itâs complicated
The war in Iran has fuelled forecasts for when Bitcoin will reach its next record high
Hi! Eric here.
Bitcoin showed signs of life this week.
The top cryptocurrency, which has trembled between $60,000 and $70,000 for most of February, finally broke out of the range after the US and Israel attacked Iran.
Itâs currently trading just above $70,000.
Now what?
Will the Middle Eastern conflict shake Bitcoin and the rest of the cryptocurrency market out of their funk and catapult them back to prices seen in October â or even above those levels?
The answer depends on who youâre asking.
Perennial pumpers like Maelstromâs Arthur Hayes already sermonise a return to the land of milk and honey where Bitcoin reaches record prices.
Their argument usually follows the same format.
Any escalation of the conflict will force the US government to step in to fund the war effort.
When that happens, the Federal Reserve will pump more liquidity into the economy, which will trigger new crypto all-time highs faster than you can say âSatoshi Nakamoto.â
Others are not as bullish. CoinSharesâ James Butterfill and Wintermuteâs Jake Ostroviskis warn that Iranâs response to the attacks â especially the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the passage of about a fifth of the worldâs oil â will raise fuel prices.
Surging energy prices translate to higher inflation and higher inflation means that the Fed is less likely to cut interest rates. Lower interest rates usually incentivise investors to bet on riskier assets like Bitcoin.
Indeed, the chance of the US central bank cutting rates in June has dropped to just over 37% from 41% earlier this week, according to the CMEâs FedWatch tool.
Then there are those that say that Bitcoinâs price jumping above $70,000 is just a preamble to more violent drops as the rise will invite traders to take profit.
Even before US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signed off on the airstrikes that took out Iranâs supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Bloomberg analysts warned that Bitcoinâs price would likely fall to $10,000 in the coming months.
So, I guess weâll just have to wait and see what happens next.
On Thursday, Senator Elizabeth Warren, an outspoken critic of the crypto industry, launched a fierce attack against Donald Trump after the Securities and Exchange Commission dropped charges against Justin Sun, Lance Datskoluo reports.
Leopold Aschenbrenner, a researcher who was fired by OpenAI in 2024 over an alleged information leak, placed a number of bets on the Bitcoin mining sector through his billion-dollar hedge fund, Situational Awareness LP, Pedro Solimano reports.
The banking lobby has been left âdeeply concernedâ after Krakenâs master account request was approved by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, which will give the crypto exchange access to the payment infrastructure traditional lenders use.
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