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Why Bitcoin fell below $63K after the oil shock finally eased

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Bitcoin traded at $63,030 on June 18, down about 2% on the day, after whipsawing from an intraday high of $64,731 to a low of $62,263 while oil was falling and ships were moving through the Strait of Hormuz for the first time in weeks.

Today, June 19, it then continued to experience weak price performance, approaching $62,450 as of press time.

The US-Iran Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding, signed by President Donald Trump and sent to Congress on June 18, commits Iran to ensuring safe commercial passage through the Strait of Hormuz for 60 days, while the US fully ends its naval blockade on Iranian ports within 30 days.

Three Saudi-flagged supertankers carrying 6 million barrels of crude sailed through the Strait hours after Trump signed the deal, with vessels broadcasting their positions again after weeks of concealing voyages.

Brent touched its lowest level since before the war began on Feb. 28, settling near $79.85, while WTI settled at $76.60. The Strait handles roughly 20% of global oil supply, and for the first time since the conflict began, that supply lane was open.

Lower oil reduces the risk of another energy-driven inflation impulse, which in a standard macro sequence eases inflation expectations, puts downward pressure on yields, and makes risk assets with long duration more attractive to rate-sensitive positioning.

Bitcoin fell even as the Hormuz oil shock eased
A June 18 snapshot showing Bitcoin’s $62,263–$64,731 intraday range alongside Brent and WTI settlements and ships resuming Hormuz passage under the US-Iran MOU.

The Fed repriced what oil cannot fix

The FOMC held its target range at 3.50%-3.75% on June 18, but the dot plot was hawkish enough to overwhelm the oil signal.

Reports noted that 9 of 18 Fed policymakers now expect at least one rate hike this year, up from 0 in March, with 6 of those 9 projecting more than one 25-basis-point increase.

The Fed’s median year-end PCE inflation forecast rose to 3.6% from 2.7% in March, and the statement said inflation is still elevated relative to its 2% goal and that the Committee “will deliver price stability.”

The FOMC cited supply shocks, including energy, which means the Fed is not yet treating the oil drop as a solved problem.

The US dollar index hit a one-year high of 100.80 after the Fed’s statement, with Fed funds futures pricing a 68% chance of a rate hike by September.

Bitcoin’s price action on June 18 saw the Hormuz deal remove one pressure point, while the Fed reintroduced a larger one, pushing BTC lower.

Macro channelWhat happenedUsual BTC effectJune 18 read
Hormuz / oilSafe-passage MOU, ships moving, oil lowerBullish: reduces inflation shock riskHelped sentiment, but not enough
Fed ratesTarget held at 3.50%-3.75%Neutral on headlineHawkish because dots shifted
Dot plot9 of 18 officials see at least one hikeBearish for liquidity assetsRepriced rate path tighter
Inflation forecastYear-end PCE forecast rose to 3.6% from 2.7%Bearish if it delays easing or implies hikesFed still sees inflation problem
DollarDXY hit 100.80 one-year highBearish for BTCTightened global liquidity
Fed funds futures68% chance of hike by SeptemberBearish for risk durationOverwhelmed oil relief

Lower oil today does not erase the inflation and rate-risk damage already embedded in the Fed’s policy path. Policymakers marked inflation higher, nearly half see a hike coming, and the dollar is at a one-year high.

Cheaper energy helps at the margin while the Fed’s own forecasts keep the rate-hike threat alive, with policymakers signaling hikes if inflation stays above target.

What the shipping data actually shows

Shipping and insurance officials stayed cautious after the deal, and Lloyd’s Market Association warned that something approaching normal conditions could take months.

Mine-clearance operations in the Strait are incomplete, and the 60-day MOU timeline means the reopening is conditional.

That feeds directly into how Bitcoin trades the Hormuz channel from here. If the MOU holds and Brent keeps falling toward the mid-$70s, the disinflationary impulse becomes harder for the Fed to ignore.

Fed funds futures would reprice, the dollar would lose the rate-differential support that had pushed it to 100.80, and Bitcoin would have a more direct path toward recovery.

The war-risk premium that has weighed on risk assets since late February would genuinely deflate.

Where the rate path takes Bitcoin

If oil keeps falling and shipping normalization accelerates faster than Lloyd’s and industry officials expect, the disinflationary signal will eventually feed into the Fed’s inflation forecasts.

Hike odds recede, the dollar softens from its one-year high, and Bitcoin can reclaim the $65,000-$68,000 range as traders reprice the rate path rather than the war risk.

The Hormuz deal would have done what relief trades are supposed to do, it would just have taken longer than one session to show up in the macro variables the Fed watches.

If Fed hike odds keep climbing and the dollar extends its breakout above 100.80, Bitcoin faces pressure that oil relief cannot offset.

ScenarioTriggerBitcoin implicationKey level / signal to watch
Bull case: oil relief becomes liquidity reliefBrent keeps falling toward mid-$70s, shipping normalization accelerates, inflation expectations coolBTC can reclaim the $65K-$68K rangeSofter dollar, lower hike odds, Brent sliding further
Base case: Fed wall caps recoveryOil stays lower but Fed hike odds remain elevatedBTC chops around the low-to-mid $60KsDXY near 100.80, BTC struggling to hold $63K-$65K
Bear case: Fed pressure dominatesHike odds climb, dollar breaks higher, BTC loses $62K cleanly$60K area comes back into viewDXY breakout, September hike odds rising
Risk case: Hormuz relief reversesMOU frays, shipping slows, insurance risk rises againBTC faces both oil shock and Fed shockBrent spike, tanker delays, renewed Strait risk

A clean break below $62,000 on persistent dollar strength and rising rate expectations would put the $60,000 area back in view, because the macro traders driving that move would be responding to the Fed’s rate path.

June 18 confirmed the geopolitical news improved, oil fell, ships moved, and BTC still broke lower. The asset is pricing dollar strength, rate expectations, and whether cheaper oil shows up fast enough in inflation data to stop the Fed from validating the new hike dots.

Until that sequence completes, Bitcoin can receive good geopolitical news and still close the day lower.

The post Why Bitcoin fell below $63K after the oil shock finally eased appeared first on Crypto Finders

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