惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
博客园 - 司徒正美
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
博客园 - 【当耐特】
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
罗磊的独立博客
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
F
Full Disclosure
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
H
Hacker News: Front Page
L
LangChain Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
B
Blog RSS Feed
H
Heimdal Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
T
Tenable Blog
D
DataBreaches.Net
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
S
Secure Thoughts
O
OpenAI News
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Vercel News
Vercel News
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
Jina AI
Jina AI
J
Java Code Geeks
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
IT之家
IT之家
Latest news
Latest news
Cloudbric
Cloudbric

Economic news

News.az - Latest news from Azerbaijan US-Iran naval confrontation in Hormuz looms over failed Islamabad talks | News.az Russia readies first Yak-130M batch to intercept Ukrainian long-range drones | News.az Moscow and Kyiv trade blame over fresh wave of mutual strikes | News.az Nvidia-backed SiFive hits $3.65 billion valuation for open AI chips | News.az BYD sets Guinness Records, previews new EVs at MIAS 2026 | News.az Russian listed by Memorial as political prisoner goes on hunger strike | News.az US gas prices slide 2 cents to $4.14 a gallon | News.az Pilots' union calls strikes at Lufthansa on April 13, 14 | News.az US military says two of its ships transited the Strait of Hormuz | News.az US has agreed to unfreeze Iranian assets | News.az Malaysia warns of supply shortages as global tensions push up costs | News.az China hospital helps stroke patient walk using mind controlled rehab system | News.az How will Barcelona line up against Espanyol? | News.az China successfully launches test satellite for satellite internet technology support | News.az Iraqi parliament elects Nizar Amedi as country's new president | News.az India raises export duties on diesel, aviation turbine fuel | News.az Lebanese PM delays Washington trip | News.az Sources: Iran's new Supreme Leader has disfiguring injuries | News.az Iraq's Parliament convenes to elect new president | News.az Iran denies U.S. vessel crossed Strait of Hormuz | News.az Microsoft halts all carbon removal purchases | News.az BYD to install 6,000 flash chargers globally | News.az Sirens alert of drone attack from Lebanon in Western Galilee | News.az U.S. warships cross Strait of Hormuz for first time since Iran war started | News.az World Bank and IMF to host 2029 Annual Meetings in Abu Dhabi | News.az Pakistani and Iranian delegations meet for talks in Islamabad | News.az Ships sail through Strait of Hormuz as peace talks begin | News.az Israeli air attacks kill 10 in southern Lebanon | News.az US-Iran negotiations for permanent ceasefire start in Islamabad | News.az Russia and Ukraine conduct swap of 175 prisoners | News.az Pakistani jets sent to Saudi Arabia under defense pact | News.az Hikmat Hajiyev attends Bridge of Peace talks with Azerbaijan and Armenia civil society reps - VIDEO | News.az Azerbaijan evacuates 3,439 people from Iran | News.az Colombia to hike tariffs on Ecuador to 100% in retaliation | News.az Full list: Emirates, Lufthansa cut flights in Middle East crisis | News.az 3.3-magnitude earthquake hits Caspian Sea | News.az Iran leader: US should focus on ‘America First’ policy – not ‘Israel First’ | News.az Iran still holds thousands of ballistic missiles despite losses: Report | News.az Explosions rock Russia’s Tver near oil depot - VIDEO | News.az Netherlands approves Tesla supervised driving system | News.az Guelleh re-elected as Djibouti president | News.az Fuel shortages hit Ireland as tractor protests block roads | News.az Iran enters talks with ‘complete distrust’: Araghchi | News.az New Zealand: Mass evacuations as Cyclone Vaianu nears landfall in North Island | News.az Estonia opens embassy in Yerevan after shifting envoy from Tbilisi | News.az Russia strikes Odesa overnight: 2 killed, homes damaged - PHOTO | News.az Russian court sentences Georgian politician over Ukraine fighting | News.az OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's home targeted in Molotov cocktail attack | News.az 900 tons of diesel sent from Azerbaijan to Armenia | News.az Tesla stock extends 8-week losing streak as earnings approach | News.az Timing of Iran–US talks hinges on preconditions, report says | News.az Sumy hit twice: apartments set ablaze in attack - PHOTO | News.az US loses $200M drone over Strait of Hormuz, shot down by Iran? | News.az NASA turns to SpaceX, Blue Origin for Moon landings after Artemis II | News.az Civilian areas hit in Poltava drone strike | News.az Kuwait airspace closure stretches beyond six weeks | News.az Italian cargo ship blocked from Strait of Hormuz transit | News.az Trump only US president to back Iran strike, Kerry says | News.az Brittney Griner signs major deal with Sun | News.az Why Manon left Katseye — what we know | News.az Fire erupts at pharmaceutical factory in Ankara - VIDEO | News.az JD Vance arrives in Pakistan for Iran talks - VIDEO | News.az Japan boosts Rapidus with $4B chip funding | News.az US intel flags potential China weapons shipment to Iran | News.az NBA chaos: 168 players ruled out in one night | News.az Israel renews strikes on south Lebanon, killing at least 3 | News.az US judge blocks Arizona case against Kalshi | News.az Plane piloted by US Senator Tim Sheehy makes emergency landing | News.az Coachella 2026 kicks off with Sabrina Carpenter | News.az US plane carrying delegation for Iran talks lands in Pakistan | News.az IBM to pay $17M in US DEI probe settlement | News.az Lakers rout Suns to secure playoff home-court edge | News.az Iran says over 125,000 civilian structures damaged in airstrikes - VIDEO | News.az Trump Media board member Eric Swider resigns | News.az China expands footprint in Uzbekistan as Central Asia deepens Beijing ties | News.az Iran delegation warns on preconditions ahead of Islamabad talks | News.az No user data leaked in OpenAI security alert | News.az Victor Wembanyama becomes MVP eligible after 65th game despite injury | News.az PHOTOS from all 10 days of NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission | News.az Artemis II's unprecedented human experiment is just beginning | News.az Cheering crowds gather across California as Artemis II astronauts return to Earth - PHOTOS | News.az Artemis II astronauts safely back on Earth after trip around moon - LIVE | News.az What is the OpenAI security issue and why is it important? | News.az Kyiv charges three with war crimes over deportation of 35 children to Russia | News.az Iran delegation arrives in Pakistan for landmark talks with US | News.az Opening of Strait of Hormuz will be automatic | News.az Netherlands greenlights Tesla's FSD Supervised mode for use | News.az Prince Harry sued by African charity he co-founded | News.az Vance and Bessent questioned tech giants on AI security before Anthropic's Mythos | News.az Morgan Stanley mostly positive on Tesla's Robotaxi | News.az Shocking close call at LAX: Pilot forced to slam brakes to avoid trucks - AUDIO | News.az Brazil places BYD on blacklist over slave-like working conditions | News.az Pakistan hosting US-Iran talks a ‘proud moment’, says PM Sharif | News.az Trump says Iranians have no cards, ahead of negotiations | News.az US budget deficit widens in March as tax breaks boost refunds | News.az China regulates AI human-like interaction services to protect minors | News.az Ali Vaez: Iran-US talks face major collapse risk — VIDEO | News.az Russia trade surplus falls sharply as exports decline in early 2026 | News.az Barcelona seek quick La Liga recovery after Atletico defeat ahead of Espanyol derby | News.az
Geopolitics and Bitcoin: Why (or why not) world events shake crypto markets | News.az
2026-05-14 · via Economic news

The standoff between the United States and Iran has moved to the very center of global geopolitics, and its ripple effects are being felt well beyond oil markets and diplomatic back channels. 

When tensions escalate in the Middle East, particularly around critical energy chokepoints, investors across every asset class start reassessing risk. Equities waver, commodities spike, and increasingly, attention turns to Bitcoin. 

At the end of March, as the Strait of Hormuz remained closed and uncertainty gripped global trade routes, the news that Bitcoin holds near $67,500, up from around $65,000 just days earlier, gave investors a genuine reason for optimism. 

Fast-forward to today, and Bitcoin is holding steady around $80,000. The climb has been remarkable, yet it raises a fundamental question: how can a decentralized digital asset be so deeply shaped by events happening in the Persian Gulf? The answer matters for anyone who holds crypto, watches markets, or simply wants to understand where money moves when the world gets nervous.

The Strait of Hormuz and the new language of market anxiety

The Strait of Hormuz is one of the most strategically vital waterways on earth. Around 20% of the world's oil supply passes through it, and when access is threatened or severed, the economic consequences are immediate and wide-ranging. 

Energy prices surge, shipping costs climb, and supply chains that depend on predictable fuel costs start to feel the strain. These are not abstract risks; they translate directly into inflation expectations, central bank decisions, and the broader appetite for risk assets.

When the Strait was effectively closed during the Iran-US standoff, traditional markets reacted with predictable volatility. 

Oil surged, equities in energy-dependent economies dipped, and gold (the classic safe-haven) saw a fresh wave of buyers. What was less predictable, at least to those outside the crypto space, was Bitcoin's behavior. Rather than collapsing alongside risk-on assets, it held firm and then quietly moved higher. 

Why Bitcoin reacts, and sometimes thrives, during global crises

Bitcoin's reaction to geopolitical stress is not random. There are several clear mechanisms at work. First, when governments and central banks respond to crises by injecting liquidity or signaling looser monetary policy, investors look for stores of value that sit outside the traditional financial system. Bitcoin, with its fixed supply and no central issuer, fits that description better than a few other assets do.

Second, capital flight is real. In countries or regions directly affected by conflict or sanctions, individuals and institutions often seek assets that can be held and transferred without government interference. Bitcoin's borderless, permissionless nature makes it uniquely suited to this role. During periods of heightened Iran-US tension, demand from Middle Eastern investors and those with exposure to the region has historically contributed to upward price pressure.

Third, the narrative effect should not be underestimated. Bitcoin has cultivated a reputation as digital gold, a hedge against instability. When major news outlets cover a geopolitical crisis and note that Bitcoin's price is holding steady or rising, that reinforces the narrative and draws in new buyers who are acting on perception as much as on fundamental analysis. Narrative and price form a powerful feedback loop in crypto markets.

The decentralization myth and the reality of macro correlation

There is a persistent belief among some crypto enthusiasts that Bitcoin's decentralized structure insulates it from macroeconomic forces. The logic sounds appealing: no central bank controls it, no government can devalue it, no single point of failure exists. 

All of that is technically true, but it does not mean Bitcoin operates in a vacuum.

The reality is that Bitcoin trades on exchanges, is bought and sold by human beings who also hold stocks, bonds, and real estate, and is priced in fiat currencies that are themselves subject to macro forces.

When global risk sentiment shifts sharply, as it does during a major geopolitical crisis, liquidity needs change. Investors who are overextended in risk assets may sell Bitcoin to cover losses in other assets. Conversely, investors looking to rotate out of traditional assets may buy Bitcoin as part of a broader diversification move.

The Iran-US conflict illustrated both dynamics. Early in the escalation, Bitcoin dipped slightly alongside equities as risk-off sentiment dominated and some investors liquidated positions across the board. But as the situation evolved and the prospect of a negotiated resolution emerged, Bitcoin recovered and pushed higher, faster than many traditional assets. That asymmetric recovery is what made the $67,500 level significant. It signaled that Bitcoin was not just surviving the geopolitical turbulence but potentially benefiting from the uncertainty it creates.

What investors should actually take away from all of this

Understanding the geopolitical dimension of Bitcoin pricing is not about predicting the next crisis or timing trades around diplomatic negotiations. It is about having a more complete picture of what moves this market. 

Investors who treat Bitcoin purely as a tech play or a speculative asset miss a significant driver of price behavior. Those who understand its role as a macro hedge (imperfect, volatile, but real) are better positioned to interpret price movements and make informed decisions.

The Iran-US standoff, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and Bitcoin's subsequent climb from $65,000 to $67,500 and eventually to $80,000 are not isolated data points. They are part of a larger pattern that has repeated itself across multiple geopolitical crises over the past decade. 

Each time, the specifics differ, but the underlying dynamic remains consistent: when the world feels less stable, Bitcoin's unique properties attract capital seeking alternatives to a financial system that feels exposed.

The decentralized architecture of Bitcoin does not make it immune to the world's problems. It makes it a specific kind of response to them, one that more investors, institutions, and policymakers are now taking seriously. That is the clearest signal yet that Bitcoin has moved beyond speculative novelty and into something more durable: a legitimate variable in the global financial equation.

News.Az 

By Aysel Mammadzada