Markets reversed over $3 trillion this morning as Bitcoin price exploded above $70k in 5 minutes

6 hours ago 3

$GCOIN Owns the House

$GCOIN Owns the House

Bitcoin’s jump back above $70,000 on Monday morning came with unusual clarity.

The move started when Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that the United States and Iran had held “very good and productive conversations” on a “complete and total resolution” of hostilities in the Middle East, and that planned strikes on Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure would be delayed for five days.

Within seconds, global markets repriced. Oil tumbled more than 10%, U.S. stock futures jumped more than 2%, European equities reversed sharp early losses, and Bitcoin sprinted from the upper $67,000s back through $70,000.

Kobeissi estimates the move added about $2 trillion in market value. The rally then reversed slightly after Iran said there had been “no contact” with Washington. By 8:00 a.m. ET, futures were down about 120 points from the peak, erasing roughly $1 trillion.

In Kobeissi’s words, that left the S&P 500 with a total headline-driven swing of about $3 trillion in implied market value in 56 minutes.

Annotated S&P 500 futures chart showing a sharp 240-point spike after Trump said US-Iran talks were productive, followed by a partial reversal after Iran denied his statement.Annotated S&P 500 futures chart showing a sharp 240-point spike after Trump said US-Iran talks were productive, followed by a partial reversal after Iran denied his statement.

Trump’s post was the trigger, but the force came from the macro chain that followed

Before the post, the market had been moving in the opposite direction. Higher crude prices were feeding a stagflation scare. Rising energy costs were threatening to push inflation expectations higher just as growth data had started to soften. Bond yields were climbing again. Bitcoin, gold, and equity futures were all under pressure while rates rose into a more sensitive zone.

In CryptoSlate’s morning analysis of the week ahead, the focus had already shifted from oil alone to the bond market, with the U.S. 10-year yield approaching a level that can tighten financial conditions quickly.

Then the market received a de-escalation signal.

The reaction after Trump’s post filled in the sequence in real time. Brent crude dropped more than 10% as traders stripped out part of the war premium. Dow futures rose about 2.6%, while the FTSE 100 recovered almost all of an earlier 250-point slide. Gold also reversed sharply, with an intraday slide of more than 7% before losses narrowed.

In rates, the U.S. 10-year yield dropped more than 20 basis points to around 4.30% before settling near 4.36% as of press time. Bitcoin followed the same repricing path at high speed, reclaiming $70,000 as the pressure embedded in oil and yields started to ease.

Oil cracked first. Yields backed off. Gold reversed. Equity futures snapped higher. Bitcoin then expressed the same repricing faster than most major assets.

The significance for Bitcoin sits one layer below the spike itself. Nothing about the crypto market changed in a structural sense during those five minutes. The post did not bring a new ETF catalyst, a policy shift from the Fed, or a sudden change in on-chain conditions.

What changed was the macro environment that had been pressing on every risk-sensitive asset for days. The market moved from pricing a wider energy shock to pricing the possibility of a pause.

CryptoSlate’s recent coverage has already mapped that transition.

  • On March 7, we argued that oil had become one of Bitcoin’s clearest macro signals.
  • On March 9, Bitcoin slipped below $70,000 as oil moved higher and stagflation fears intensified.
  • On March 11, the market showed its first instinct during an oil panic, when traders sold Bitcoin rather than treating it as a haven.
  • On March 12, Bitcoin held up better even as Brent briefly reclaimed $100, which suggested the market was beginning to separate immediate panic from broader positioning.
  • By Monday morning, the center of gravity had shifted again, from oil shock alone to the risk that higher yields would become the dominant problem.

Monday’s move above $70,000 needs to be read inside that framework.

The timing invites a stronger political-economic reading

The U.S. 10-year had been approaching a zone that can become politically and financially difficult very quickly. Mortgage costs respond to it. Equities respond to it. Fiscal sensitivity rises with it. The White House watches it.

My morning piece already outlined the market’s concern around the 4.5% area, especially with Treasury auctions, flash PMIs, jobless claims, and inflation expectations lined up to shape the week. Trump’s post arrived just as the bond market was threatening to become part of the problem in a larger way.

Trump's post could be more than a diplomatic update. It looks like an intervention into a market sequence that was beginning to grow expensive.

Oil was pushing inflation risk back into the system. Rising yields were tightening financial conditions. Gold and stock futures had already moved into defensive positions. A de-escalation signal at that point gave traders permission to reverse the most painful part of the morning’s repricing.

That interpretation rests on incentives and timing, rather than on any official confirmation of motive. It fits the market sequence cleanly. It also fits the broader sensitivity around borrowing costs. The Guardian’s live coverage captured the pressure that rising yields had already started to place on the UK mortgage market, while we had already identified bond yields as the more dangerous extension of the oil shock for Bitcoin.

Once yields started to ease after Trump’s post, the path higher in BTC reopened immediately.

Bitcoin’s own market structure helps explain why the move traveled so fast.

A session shaped by higher oil and rising yields usually creates a defensive posture across crypto. Spot demand softens. Leveraged players hedge. Short exposure can build when macro pressure aligns across rates and energy.

Once the macro impulse flips, crypto often becomes the fastest outlet for the reversal. That appears to be what happened on Monday.

The move through $70,000 reads as a relief repricing amplified by positioning, speed, and the market’s existing sensitivity to macro inputs.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.

5-minute digest 100k+ readers

Free. No spam. Unsubscribe any time.

Whoops, looks like there was a problem. Please try again.

You’re subscribed. Welcome aboard.

Macro repricing added an important confirming signal

Gold's sharp reversal suggests that traders were taking out part of the immediate war premium rather than rotating into a classic safe-haven structure. Bitcoin moved with that same repricing wave, which places it firmly inside the macro risk complex for this session.

That fits the recent pattern we have shown in our own reporting, where Bitcoin has traded more like a high-beta expression of financial conditions than a defensive shelter during energy-driven stress.

There are still limits to how far Monday’s relief can be extended.

Iranian media quickly pushed back on Trump’s account of the talks. Business Insider noted that oil rebounded from its lows as traders began to question how durable the de-escalation signal really was.

That leaves the market with a pause, rather than with resolution. The difference is important because Bitcoin’s hold above $70,000 now depends less on the post itself and more on whether the broader macro relief can survive a week, which remains difficult to read.

The normal inflation anchor is absent. The Bureau of Economic Analysis release calendar shows that the February PCE will not arrive until April 9, leaving traders leaning more heavily on secondary indicators and Treasury supply.

Our morning analysis highlighted the immediate sequence: flash PMIs on Tuesday, the 2-year auction on Tuesday, the 5-year on Wednesday, jobless claims and the 7-year auction on Thursday, and the final University of Michigan sentiment reading on Friday.

With oil having shaken inflation expectations and bond yields already testing market tolerance, those events now carry more weight for Bitcoin than any crypto-native development on the calendar.

That leaves Bitcoin with a clearer near-term map

If oil stays contained and the U.S. 10-year remains below the earlier stress zone, Monday’s move can become a platform. A reclaimed $70,000 then starts to look like a level the market can build above while it reassesses the inflation path and broader financial conditions.

If oil regains momentum and yields resume their climb, the relief trade loses force quickly. Bitcoin would then move back into the same macro regime that had been dragging on it before Trump posted, one defined by tighter financial conditions, more expensive risk, and a market that still sees stagflation as a live possibility.

The answer to the morning’s initial question is now fairly tight.

Bitcoin jumped almost 5% in five minutes because Trump’s post broke a one-way macro sequence that had been building across oil, rates, metals, and equities.

The post gave traders a reason to cut some of the war premium. Oil fell, yields followed, stocks reversed, gold dropped, and Bitcoin expressed the repricing fastest.

The deeper layer is the one traders will keep watching. Trump’s post arrived at a point where rising oil and rising yields were beginning to feed into a more dangerous mix for financial conditions.

The market response suggests participants understood the signal immediately.

For Bitcoin, the move above $70,000 restored momentum. Whether that level holds now depends on the next phase of the same macro chain, crude, yields, and whether the market believes the relief has enough substance to keep financial conditions from tightening again.

$GCOIN Owns the House

$GCOIN Owns the House

Bitcoin Market Data

At the time of press 1:40 pm UTC on Mar. 23, 2026, Bitcoin is ranked #1 by market cap and the price is up 3.45% over the past 24 hours. Bitcoin has a market capitalization of $1.42 trillion with a 24-hour trading volume of $44.7 billion. Learn more about Bitcoin ›

Crypto Market Summary

At the time of press 1:40 pm UTC on Mar. 23, 2026, the total crypto market is valued at at $2.42 trillion with a 24-hour volume of $106.96 billion. Bitcoin dominance is currently at 58.55%. Learn more about the crypto market ›

Mentioned in this article
Read Entire Article
Patroli | Crypto | | |