Bitcoin has risen 23% since the Iran crisis escalated, while gold and equities have both fallen. The Polymarket contract asking whether Bitcoin will dip to $60,000 by April 30 sits at low probability.
Market reaction
The Bitcoin market has seen no recent trading volume. During the geopolitical escalation, capital has flowed into Bitcoin rather than out of it, with the price move suggesting buyers are treating it as a hedge rather than a risk asset. The 23% gain stands in direct contrast to declines in both gold and equities over the same period.
Why it matters
The inflows into Bitcoin point to a strategic shift in how traders are positioning around geopolitical risk. If this pattern holds, the probability of Bitcoin falling to $60,000 stays low. Traders are effectively betting that Bitcoin holds its strength even if tensions persist or worsen.
Gold tells a different story. The Polymarket contract on gold hitting $8,000 by June has seen its odds decrease. Gold has long been the default geopolitical hedge, but its decline during this particular crisis complicates that assumption. The shift suggests some capital that would normally flow into gold is going to Bitcoin instead.
What to watch
For traders, the practical question is whether Bitcoin’s role as a geopolitical hedge is durable or situational. At current odds, betting against a Bitcoin dip offers limited upside. Betting on Bitcoin maintaining or increasing its value matches the direction of actual capital flows right now.
Watch for moves by institutional players like BlackRock or Fidelity, whose positioning could accelerate or reverse Bitcoin’s current trajectory.
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