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March 10, 2026

Bitcoin Rose 3.7% While Gold Dropped and the S&P Hit a 2026 Low: The First Real Decoupling of the Crisis Anush Jafer | usagoldmines.com

$30. That’s how much the price of oil moved in a single day yesterday, opening the day at around $85 to reach a high of $115 before crashing back to $85 within hours. This move was one of the most volatile swings in crude since 2020. The violent move came as President Donald Trump signaled that the Iran conflict was “pretty much” over, citing that Iran’s military capabilities have been heavily degraded. This proclamation abruptly eased fears of a prolonged energy supply shock. Despite this, the lingering uncertainty still had a negative impact on global markets. The S&P 500 closed the day at $6,795, its lowest level this year, the VIX (Wall Street’s fear gauge) shot up to a one year high of 35.30 and even traditional safe havens like Gold saw a red day. Yet in the middle of the chaos, Bitcoin did something completely different by rising 3.73% and now trading above the $70K mark.  

This was the first indication of a genuine decoupling taking place during the crisis, and not for the reason many expected. BTC did not hold up despite being a risk asset; it held up because the United States is uniquely insulated from this particular oil shock. The U.S. imports only a small portion of its crude from the Middle East and is now the world’s largest net exporter of oil, thus making its economy far less sensitive to the geopolitical supply disruption shaking the rest of the world. As a result, Bitcoin, which is increasingly tied to the U.S. financial system through ETFs and institutional flows, behaved less like digital gold and more like a quasi-U.S. macro asset. 

Oil Just Had Its Wildest Day Since 2020 and Bitcoin Ignored It 

The volatility seen in oil markets yesterday was something not seen in years. As fears of further disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz intensified, WTI crude rose above the $115 mark to reach a high of $119 per barrel, the highest level since June 2022. This rally, however, reversed just as quickly as it started after President Donald Trump told CBS that the Iran war was “very complete, pretty much”, hinting that the hostilities might soon be coming to an end. Oil prices plummeted back toward the $85 range within hours, producing an intraday swing of over $30, a move not since 2020. 

Another factor that added to the shift in sentiment was news that G7 nations were discussing the possibility of releasing emergency oil reserves in coordination with the International Energy Agency. That said, the reality is that oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain at a standstill with tanker traffic hovering near zero. This shock has already seeped into gasoline prices across the U.S. with the national average now at 3.53, up 13.8% since last week. 

Despite this macro backdrop, Bitcoin moved in the opposite direction. It climbed by 3.73%, opening the day at $65,970 and rallying all the way to a high of $69,543, outperforming traditional indices like the S&P 500 and the largest stock markets across Asia. Analysts at QCP Capital noted that while Bitcoin may not have fully earned its “digital gold” label yet, its role as a “digital escape hatch” is becoming increasingly relevant, particularly for capital in the Gulf region navigating geopolitical and financial uncertainty.

The US Is Insulated From This Oil Shock and That’s Why Bitcoin Held 

A key reason for why Bitcoin has held up so well during the crisis so far might actually be less to do with crypto itself and more to do with the structure of the global energy market. As analysts from JP Morgan state, “the United States is not meaningfully exposed to oil from Iran, or, more broadly, the Middle East.” Majority of the imports are from Canada and Mexico with only 4% coming from Saudi Arabia while becoming the world’s largest net exporter thanks to the shale boom and rising domestic production. This relative level of isolation means that the immediate economic damage is far less severe in the U.S. compared to many other regions. 

Source: Visual Capitalist

Oil dependency on the Strait of Hormuz and the performance of countries’ main stock indices seem to be highly correlated right now. Asian economies that are far more dependent on energy flows from the Middle East have taken the largest hits since the conflict erupted on February 28. For instance, since the start of the war, South Korea’s Kospi is down over -10%, Japan’s Nikkei dropped roughly -5% and India’s Nifty falling around -3.5%, while the S&P 500 is down only about -1.23%. Bitcoin, meanwhile, has outperformed all these major indices and is currently up over +6% since hostilities began. 

The reason lies in how Bitcoin now trades. Since the Bitcoin Spot ETFs went live over two years ago, BTC has increasingly behaved like a quasi-U.S. risk asset, moving alongside Wall Street, U.S. tech stocks, and dollar liquidity. Institutional access via these ETFs has effectively tethered Bitcoin to U.S. capital flows, meaning it benefitted from the same relative insulation that has so far protected American markets. Having said that, as the on ground situation of the conflict is still developing, this insulation may not last forever. JP Morgan also cautions that if the war continues to drag on, higher oil prices could very likely feed into U.S. inflation and consumer costs. This means the protection that the market is seeing today could very well be temporary. 

Every VIX Spike Above 30 Since 2023 Has Marked Bitcoin’s Bottom

The CBOA Volatility Index (VIX) rose above 35 on Monday for the first time in nearly a year, indicating panic across traditional markets. Looking back, these spikes in the VIX have often correlated quite closely with Bitcoin market bottoms. During the Silicon Valley Bank crisis in March 2023, the VIX rose above 30 as BTC bottomed near $20,000. In August 2024, the unwind of the yen carry trade pushed the VIX above 64, with Bitcoin finding support around $49,000. The pattern repeated in April 2025, when tariff turmoil sent the VIX near 60 and BTC bottomed around $75,000. Now with the Iran war and the resultant oil shock pushing the VIX above 35 and Bitcoin rallying past $70K, an inflection point might be forming. 

The logic behind this pattern is pretty straightforward. A VIX spike means peak panic in traditional markets, while Bitcoin, trading 24/7 with deep liquidity, often front-runs the capitulation phase. In fact, when we look at BTC’s own volatility gauge, the Volmex Implied Volatility Index (BVIV), it appears to have absorbed much of the stress earlier. The BVIV skyrocketed to 88.54 in early February when Bitcoin hit a low of $60K but has since cooled to 58.02, hinting at the possibility that Bitcoin’s peak panic phase may already be behind even as TradFi volatility goes up. 

Contrarian signals continue to stack up. The crypto fear and greed index is at extreme fear levels, funding rates across major alts remain negative and the Bitcoin network has just crossed a historic milestone with the 20 millionth Bitcoin mined, putting 95.2% of the total 21 million now in circulation. With the remaining one million BTC set to be mined slowly over the next century and spot ETFs already holding tens of billions of dollars worth of coins, the market now finds itself in a rare setup where maximum scarcity is colliding with maximum fear.

CPI Wednesday, FOMC March 18: What Breaks the Pattern 

The first major catalyst that could likely decide directionality for BTC is going to be the U.S. CPI report that comes out on Thursday, March 12. This will be the final inflation reading before the Fed meets next week. If the brief oil spike feeds into inflation data, it could reinforce the stagflation narrative now hanging over markets. But if CPI largely reflects pre-shock energy prices, markets may interpret it as a relief signal

The focus is then on the FOMC meeting on March 18. While the odds of maintaining rates are overwhelmingly high at 97.3%, what matters here is the tone and language used at the press conference. If policymakers frame the oil shock as deflationary through demand destruction rather than inflationary, it could be bullish for risk assets, including Bitcoin. 

Apart from these macroeconomic events, oil itself remains the biggest swing factor. If disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz come to a halt, oil prices could fall quickly and remove the inflation threat. On the other hand, if Trump’s “war is over” rhetoric proves to be premature and strikes resume, this could very likely lead to spikes in oil prices and bring in a lot more uncertainty across markets. 

 

This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak

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