Bitcoin Holds Steady Despite U.S. Strikes on Iran—Trading at $63,800
By John Nada·Jul 12, 2026·3 min read
Bitcoin steadied at $63,800 as the U.S. launched airstrikes on Iran. Crude oil markets await Monday's reopening for a fuller reaction.
Bitcoin traded around $63,800 with only slight daily moves despite new U.S. airstrikes on Iran and Tehran’s declaration that it had closed the Strait of Hormuz. Other major cryptocurrencies, including Ethereum, XRP, and Dogecoin, also saw only fractional price changes, continuing a muted pattern of reaction to Middle East tensions.
Markets for oil, stocks, and bonds are shut for the weekend, leaving Bitcoin as one of the few assets pricing the latest escalation in real time. A fuller reaction in crude is expected when trading resumes Monday. Bitcoin held near $63,800 on Saturday after the U.S. launched its third round of strikes on Iran this week and Tehran declared the Strait of Hormuz closed "until further notice." The largest cryptocurrency was down 0.3% over 24 hours and up 2% on the week.
Vessel-tracking data showed some traffic around the Strait of Hormuz in Asian morning hours Sunday, though movement through the chokepoint remained well below normal. U.S. Central Command reported that President Trump ordered the strikes, which targeted Iran's ability to attack commercial vessels, following an Iranian attack on a Cyprus-flagged container ship.

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Iranian state media reported explosions along the country's southern coast, including the energy hubs of Bushehr and Asalouyeh and the port cities of Bandar Abbas and Bandar-e Dayyer. Ether was similarly quiet at about $1,800, up 2% on the week. Solana was the weakest of the majors at $76, down 5% over seven days, while XRP slipped to $1.09 and Dogecoin eased to about $0.07. The moves across the board were fractions of a percent on the day.
The muted response is the pattern now. When Iran first closed the Strait of Hormuz in early March, Brent crude jumped past $100 a barrel for the first time in four years and later peaked near $120, and Bitcoin sold off sharply on each escalation. Part of that is timing. Oil, equities, and bonds are closed for the weekend, so Bitcoin is the only large market open to price the strikes in real time, and it is treating them as close to a non-event.
The real test comes Monday. If crude reopens with a sharp gap higher while Bitcoin holds its ground, a calmer oil open would say the strait closure is being read as a threat Tehran has made and walked back before. Roughly a fifth of the world's seaborne oil moves through Hormuz, and Brent had already carried a risk premium into the weekend after tanker traffic through the strait stayed below normal.