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Recently, I saw something quite interesting in the markets that’s worth analyzing. An Iranian parliament spokesperson posted opposing trading comments just before the S&P 500 futures moved exactly as he had predicted. Basically, the futures opened lower on Sunday night, recovered, and then surged strongly after Trump posted on Truth Social about “great progress” in talks with Irán. The strange thing is that bitcoin had already been moving before all of this.
Here’s what caught my attention: while Wall Street was sleeping, bitcoin was the first major liquid asset to react to the conflict. It fell 8.5% over the weekend when traditional markets were closed. Then, when Trump started posting about negotiations, bitcoin rose along with stocks, but with different timing. The strongest bullish move in bitcoin came around 00:01 UTC on Monday, almost as if it were front-running what was to come at the U.S. opening.
What’s interesting is that bitcoin traded within a wide range while the S&P 500 was offline. It spent much of the close in the mid-to-high $66,000 area before strengthening toward the reopen. The S&P was more abrupt and discrete, but bitcoin was more gradual and continuous. That suggests that while equity traders were waiting for the open, bitcoin was already absorbing geopolitical inputs and showing how risk was being repriced.
This pattern repeated several times. Bitcoin dropped to $67,300 in the days that followed, then rose when Trump mentioned talks with Irán, rebounded above $71,000 when war concerns eased, and more recently has been navigating mixed messages. In the current context, bitcoin is operating like a high macro beta asset during this geopolitical revaluation.
What really defines next week is oil. WTI has risen by about 50% since the bombing began in late February. The OCDE now projects EE.UU. inflation at 4.2% for 2026, an increase of 1.2 percentage points from December expectations. That means this week’s economic data—payrolls on Friday, retail sales, manufacturing PMI—will be interpreted through an energy-stress lens.
This is where bitcoin has a structural advantage. It trades 24/7 while Wall Street is closed. If Trump posts over the weekend, bitcoin moves first. If oil rises during Asian hours, bitcoin absorbs that input before Nueva York. That makes it one of the most useful indicators for seeing how uncertainty is being processed outside of trading hours.
The unresolved question is whether this pattern will hold. The recent pattern suggests three phases: an initial risk revaluation, stabilization during the close, and then a firmer move toward the reopen. If that repeats the next time there are messages related to Irán, bitcoin’s behavior over the weekend and at night will be among the first clues as to whether another temporary relief is forming or if the energy shock takes control. It’s worth keeping bitcoin on the radar this week.