Bitcoin Holds $70K as Middle East Tensions and Inflation Concerns Weigh on Markets
Bitcoin (BTC $67,842) traded just above $70,000 on Friday as rising tensions in the Middle East pushed oil higher and investors reassessed inflation ahead of the U.S. jobs report.
The cryptocurrency briefly reached $74,000 on Wednesday but fell back in a low-liquidity zone alongside U.S. equities. Brent crude surged to $85 per barrel, up 42% year-to-date, prompting European markets to price in a potential ECB rate hike by year-end—reversing prior expectations for 2025 rate cuts. Higher rates could pressure bitcoin and other crypto assets as investors rotate toward safer, yield-bearing options.
Altcoins and Token Highlights
DeFi tokens MORPHO and JUP fell 2–3%, while privacy tokens Zcash (ZEC) and Decred (DCR) dropped 6%. OKX’s OKB gained 23% following a partnership with Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) to launch tokenized stocks and crypto futures. KITE and RIVER each rose around 15% in the past 24 hours.
Derivatives and Market Positioning
Bitcoin open interest rose to $16.16 billion from $15 billion last week, signaling renewed speculative activity. Retail funding remains stable at 0–10%, though Binance shows -2.5%, indicating localized short hedging. Options markets reflect cautious optimism: the 24-hour call/put split is 51/49, and the one-week 25-delta skew cooled to 8% from 15%. Near-term implied volatility spiked into backwardation, pointing to short-term risk, while longer-term IV holds near 50%. Coinglass reports $257 million in 24-hour liquidations, led by BTC ($121M), ETH ($51M), and other tokens ($15M), with $71,600 flagged as a key Binance liquidation level.
Crypto markets remain fragile as traders balance geopolitical risks, inflation, and short-term volatility.






















