Bitcoin Price Holds Near $70K As Markets Brace For Key Event

Source Newsbtc

Bitcoin is holding up near the upper $60Ks–$70K region despite a sharp macro shock, showing relative resilience versus equities and other risk assets.

Bitcoin Is Resilient Enough

Bitcoin appears to have passed the first stress test of the Iran shock and its aftermath. As we covered yesterday, Bitcoin snapped back above $70,000 after Iran war jitters eased, oil backed off its spike, and derivatives stress started to cool, turning a brutal liquidation into a fast‑acting relief rally.

Since then, BTC has absorbed another wave of macro nerves, briefly sliding below $63,000 on the latest risk‑off flush before clawing its way back into the high‑$60,000s/low‑$70,000s range. QCP Capital’s March 11 “Market Colour” note leans into that idea, arguing that Bitcoin has shown “notable resilience following the latest geopolitical shock”.

A Tale Of Caution

However, despite the recovery being encouraging, QCP’s Market Colour note also suggests that the price actions “looks more like stabilization than a full return to risk-on positioning”. This caution is reflected by the options markets. Implied volatility has cooled from the extreme spike after the last sell‑off and now sits in the mid‑50s, but 25‑delta risk reversals remain negative, showing traders still pay a premium for short‑dated downside puts versus upside calls. Spot BTC is holding up, but options desks don’t yet believe in an explosive upside; they are still hedging against another leg lower, in line with QCP’s observation that downside protection remains in demand.

“Stagflation” Risk For Bitcoin

QCP’s reading of BTC’s recent activity frames it in “stagflationary shock”. Stagflation is the worst possible macro mix for traders: growth is stalling, inflation is still hot, and the Fed can’t easily save risk assets without risking even more inflations.

Since tensions escalated in the Middle East and oil ripped toward the $120 area, global markets have been trading a stagflation narrative: softer stocks, higher yields, and an inflation shock driven by energy rather than growth. As we recently highlighted, macro analyst Alex Krüger argues that the Iran‑driven oil shock of 2026 looks more transitory than the 2022 Russia shock, with futures pricing still suggesting markets expect supply chains to heal rather than a prolonged energy crunch that would force the Fed into panic hikes

What Traders Should Look For

Caught between its “digital gold” narrative and its behaviour as a high‑beta macro asset, bitcoin cannot amount to a clean safe‑haven victory lap just yet. Instead, the tape and the options surface are sending a more nuanced message: spot is resilient, but big players are still paying for downside protection and treating every bounce as a potential fade if the macro data breaks the wrong way.

For traders, the setup is binary around the incoming CPI and the energy tape. A benign inflation print and calmer oil could finally flip this from “stagflation scare” to “soft‑landing hope”. A hotter‑than‑expected CPI, by contrast, would validate the stagflation narrative, reward those who stayed hedged, and reopen the door to a deeper retest of the mid‑$60,000s before any attempt at new highs.

 

Bitcoin, BTC, BTCUSDT

Cover image from Perplexity, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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