Bitcoin fell below $69,000 amid a global sell-off driven by escalating Middle East tensions that also caused energy prices to surge.
Bitcoin ( BTC) plummeted below the $69,000 mark Thursday afternoon, swept up in a broad-based global sell-off that spared neither digital assets nor traditional safe havens like gold. The top cryptocurrency’s slide comes as escalating Middle East tensions sent energy prices soaring and rattled investor confidence across all sectors.
According to Bitstamp data, bitcoin hit an intraday low of $68,799 before a modest recovery saw it initially stabilize above $69,500. The volatility follows news of airstrikes targeting Iranian and Qatari gas fields, an escalation that propelled Brent crude above $110 per barrel and sent natural gas prices surging more than 20%.
The resulting flight to cash unexpectedly battered the gold market, which typically thrives during geopolitical instability. The precious metal shed more than 4% of its value, tapping a low of $4,500 per ounce—its weakest level since Feb. 2—before recovering to the $4,600 range.
While bitcoin has recently shown a tendency to decouple or trend against traditional equities, Thursday’s action signaled a return to high correlation with macro risk. The digital asset has now declined approximately 9% from its March 17 peak of $76,013, effectively erasing all gains made since March 12.
The downturn forced bitcoin’s market capitalization below the $1.4 trillion threshold. This slide dragged the aggregate crypto economy down to $2.46 trillion, a sharp 9% decline from the $2.64 trillion peak recorded just 48 hours earlier.
As price swings intensified, leveraged traders faced massive wipeouts. Data shows bitcoin’s volatility triggered the liquidation of $138 million in long positions over a 12-hour window, compared to just $24.5 million in short bets. Across the broader digital asset market, total liquidations reached $442 million, with long positions accounting for roughly 80% of the total casualties.