Iran Rejects Peace Talk Claims, Leaving Bitcoin Stuck At $70K
Bitcoin’s halving clock is ticking toward what analysts call a critical threshold — and the crypto market has bigger problems on its hands right now.
Conflicting Signals From Washington And Tehran
Reports indicate that US President Donald Trump described recent contact with Iranian officials as productive, suggesting both sides had found common ground on winding down hostilities.
He even floated the idea of Iran sharing control over the Strait of Hormuz and working alongside whoever leads the country after Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
Markets moved fast on those words. Bitcoin climbed from roughly $68,850 to $71,250 — a gain of about 3.50% — while Ethereum rose 2.50% to $2,125. Oil, which had been trading above $100 a barrel, dropped to $89.40.


Iran’s Foreign Ministry Pushes Back
Spokesperson Esmail Baqaei said his government has not held any talks that could be described as productive with Washington.
He added that Iran has not responded to messages passed through third-party countries — Turkey, Oman, and Egypt among them — urging a negotiated off-ramp from the conflict.
Iran’s conditions for ending the war remain unchanged: US military bases closed, American forces disarmed, full control of the Strait of Hormuz transferred to Iranian governance, financial compensation for war damages, and a binding guarantee against future military action. Those are not conditions that bend easily.
Markets Caught Between Two Stories
With Washington and Tehran offering opposing accounts of where diplomacy stands, crypto traders were left with little to go on. Bitcoin stalled near the $70,000 mark, unable to hold the momentum it briefly found on Trump’s remarks.
The mismatch in statements from both governments has kept investors cautious, and analysts say continued volatility is likely as long as the geopolitical situation stays unresolved.
Oil prices are a key variable. If the conflict heats back up — especially around the Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant portion of the world’s oil passes — energy costs could surge again.
Higher energy prices feed inflation, and inflation clouds the outlook for interest rates. That chain of events tends to pull risk assets lower, and crypto has not been immune.
Upcoming releases on US inflation and unemployment claims, along with commentary from the Federal Reserve on how rising energy costs might shape rate decisions, are all on traders’ radar this week.
Whale Activity Points To A Market At A Crossroads
On-chain data shows Bitcoin’s Exchange Whale Ratio sitting at 0.7. Based on historical patterns, that level has often appeared near market bottoms, which some read as a sign that large holders are accumulating rather than selling.
Featured image from Trends Research, chart from TradingView