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How Oil fell below $100 a barrel as Bitcoin broke $71k in surreal night of after hours trading

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How Oil fell below $100 a barrel as Bitcoin broke $71k in surreal night of after hours trading

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Bitcoin, SPY, and crude oil tracked a single overnight pivot as Trump moved from existential rhetoric to a two-week Iran ceasefire

Markets spent the night repricing a single geopolitical variable rather than growth, inflation, or crypto-specific risk.

After using unprecedented and combustible language earlier in the day, once Donald Trump signaled a two-week Iran ceasefire window, the war premium embedded across crude, equities, and Bitcoin unwound in near real time, turning what had looked like a fragmented macro session into a synchronized cross-asset reversal.

Bitcoin clings to $68,000 as Trump’s final Iran deadline expires at 8 PM EST and oil screams higherBitcoin clings to $68,000 as Trump’s final Iran deadline expires at 8 PM EST and oil screams higher
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Escalation rhetoric and infrastructure risk set the afternoon market structure

The path from Tuesday morning in London to Wednesday morning ran through a narrow set of political signals, and markets responded with unusual clarity once that sequence resolved.

Through the first half of 7 April, investors were still carrying a war premium tied to the Strait of Hormuz, the risk of further strikes on energy infrastructure, and Donald Trump’s own deadline for Iran to reverse course.

By late evening in the UK, that premium started to erode. Around 23:30 BST, Trump used Truth Social to declare a two-week ceasefire, roughly 90 minutes before the 01:00 BST deadline.

From there, the cross-asset move accelerated, crude collapsed, SPY surged in after-hours trading, and Bitcoin broke sharply higher.

The chronology is important because the price moves only make sense when the political sequence is placed in order. A BBC live blog snapshot captured most of the daytime progression on 7 April.

Trump’s warning that “a whole civilization will die tonight” came about an hour before the blog’s 14:40 BST entry around 13:40 BST. Such a statement had never been delivered so directly and publicly by a sitting US President in the country’s history. Threatening to wipe out a “whole civilization” alludes to a form of warfare the world has spent over 70 years trying to avoid.

However, the calming factor for most tracking the night’s event was that markets were moving in the opposite direction to catastrophic escalation.

The crisis window then deepened when the BBC reported at 14:28 BST that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said it had struck a petrochemical complex in Saudi Arabia’s Jubail region. Those two developments, existential rhetoric from the White House and a direct signal against Gulf energy infrastructure, were unusually muted within the afternoon market response.

Thirty-minute pricing across Bitcoin, SPY, and crude showed merely modest caution. Around the 13:30 to 14:30 BST window, BTC/USD slipped from $68,376 to $68,227, SPY moved from 656 to 654, and crude rose from $105 to $106.

Three-panel market chart showing Bitcoin surging above $71,000, the S&P 500 ETF rising after hours, and crude oil falling sharply below $100.Three-panel market chart showing Bitcoin surging above $71,000, the S&P 500 ETF rising after hours, and crude oil falling sharply below $100.
Three-panel market chart showing Bitcoin surging above $71,000, the S&P 500 ETF rising after hours, and crude oil falling sharply below $100.

Still, the next hour reinforced that sentiment. From 14:00 to 15:00 BST, Bitcoin fell about 0.5%, SPY lost about 0.3%, and crude gained about 1.0%.

The market was assigning a higher probability to elevated energy disruption and a lower probability to an orderly diplomatic exit. Crude oil served as the clearest expression of regional war risk, while SPY and Bitcoin absorbed the broader risk-off spillover.

Even then, the move remained one of repricing probability rather than locking in a terminal outcome. Investors were trading a ladder of scenarios: direct escalation into the deadline, a delay engineered through intermediaries, or a last-minute political retreat from Washington.

That ladder helps explain why the evening session became more nuanced before the ceasefire was made public. The same BBC coverage tracked growing focus on diplomatic pressure from Pakistan and on whether Trump was actually prepared to carry his rhetoric through the deadline.

By UK evening, price action had already started to lean toward a softening of the deadline path. From roughly 17:30 to 20:30 BST, Bitcoin rose from $68,220 to $69,002, SPY advanced from 656 to 659, and crude eased from $106 to $103.

That was still a modest move relative to what followed overnight, though it carried weight because it signaled a market beginning to shade down immediate war risk before the final announcement arrived.

Trump’s ceasefire post triggered the sharpest cross-asset repricing of the sequence

Crude was giving back part of the afternoon spike, equities were recovering, and Bitcoin was rebuilding altitude into the close. Those moves suggested investors were picking up signs that the deadline could slip, or that diplomatic channels were achieving enough traction to cap the escalation path.

The decisive shift arrived late in the UK evening. Trump decided to suspend attacks, agreeing to pause military action about 90 minutes before his self-imposed deadline.

The ceasefire announcement came at 23:30 BST on Tuesday night. Sky News’ live coverage of the Iran ceasefire described it as an eleventh-hour intervention and traced the mediation through Pakistan, which had been pressing for more time.

Once the post landed, the market response was immediate and far larger than anything seen earlier in the day.

Between 23:00 and 00:00 UK, the three assets moved in a near-textbook fashion, culminating in a sudden collapse in the near-term war premium. Bitcoin jumped from $70,416 to $72,714, SPY climbed from 664 to 674, and crude dropped from $100 to $89.

Crude’s move was the most violent. The single largest half-hour down bar in the entire window hit around 23:30, with a drop of roughly 7.2%, before losses extended into the next bar.

That move only makes sense in a framework where supply disruption through Hormuz had been carrying substantial weight in prices and then lost that weight all at once. SPY’s after-hours surge fit the same structure from the equity side.

The index rallied about 1.4% over the hour as investors repriced the probability of a broader regional conflict and, therefore, macro spillovers into growth, inflation, and central bank assumptions. Bitcoin’s breakout deserves separate emphasis because crypto traded alongside global risk rather than simply as a geopolitical hedge.

Once immediate escalation probabilities fell, Bitcoin joined the relief move with greater magnitude than SPY and greater persistence than crude’s first rebound.

The political sequence after the Truth Social post helped stabilize that first wave of repricing. Sky reported that Tehran said it would permit “safe passage” through the Strait of Hormuz during the ceasefire, with coordination involving its armed forces, and that Iran had presented a ten-point plan through Pakistan.

In market terms, that additional language shifted the ceasefire from a unilateral Trump declaration into something closer to an operational arrangement with implications for shipping and energy flows.

Once safe passage through Hormuz entered the public domain, the overnight move became harder to fade.

That was visible in the next set of bars. Bitcoin held above $72,000 through the 00:00 bar and only modestly retraced from its peak.

SPY kept the after-hours gap intact. Crude rebounded from the first shock low, though it stayed near $90 to $91, far below the $100-plus levels that prevailed before the ceasefire post.

This was a transition from panic premium to partial normalization. Energy traders removed the immediate blockade and supply-shock assumptions, though they did not restore pricing to a pre-crisis state because the military and political structure was still unstable.

By Wednesday morning, markets had isolated the main conclusion even as the ceasefire remained partial

Equity traders embraced the drop in tail risk. Bitcoin traders priced lower the immediate conflict risk and a broader recovery in global risk appetite.

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