Bitcoin Regains $61K in Worst Start to Most Bullish Month as Israel-Iran Tensions Rage On

  • Tensions in the Middle East pushed down BTC during the first half of Asia trading hours Wednesday.
  • The CoinDesk 20, a measure of the most liquid digital assets, had its worst drop in weeks.

Bitcoin (BTC) rose above $61,500 in Asian morning hours Wednesday after sliding to as low as $60,300 late Tuesday as a Middle East conflict grows, denting hopes for a rally in the asset’s historically most bullish month.

Iran fired about 200 ballistic missiles at Israel on Tuesday, threatening a fresh round of attacks as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to retaliate. The strike was in response to Israel first carrying out a series of attacks on Lebanon in the past weeks.

BTC fell the most in over a month, while gold rose, with the drop reaching 6% at one point and 24-hour losses at 3.5%. That was the worst start for the asset’s historically most bullish month, Presto Research traders wrote in a note Wednesday.

Polymarket bettors are giving a 49% chance that Israel will retaliate against Iran by the end of the week.

“Historically, October has been a strong month for BTC with only two losing years out of the last 11,” Presto said. It pointed out gold’s outperformance in the past 24 hours as a measure of the different maturity levels of both assets.

“Last night’s BTC price action (BTC -4% vs. gold +0.8%) in the aftermath of Iran’s attack in May puzzling, esp. considering BlackRock’s recent pitch for BTC as a risk-off asset similar to gold,” researchers led by Peter Chung wrote. “The reality is that the difference in these two assets’ short-term price actions reflects their different maturity phases.”

The broad-based CoinDesk 20 (CD20) fell 4.7%, its worst drop in recent weeks.

“Gold is a much more mature asset, with a 5,000 year history as a store of value, so there’s not much room left for incremental network effects. BTC, on the other hand, shares the same attributes that make gold a good store of value (better in many cases), but with only 15 15-year history. This means it’s in the early stages of mainstream adoption, and its narrative is still poorly understood,” they added.

Dogecoin (DOGE) led losses among major tokens with an 8% haircut over the past 24 hours, CoinGecko data shows, with XRP (XRP), Solana’s SOL, BNB Chain’s BNB and ether (ETH) losing as much as 6%.

Smaller tokens with a market cap under $2 billion fared worst, with Sei Network’s SEI, memecoin floki (FLOKI) and Starknet’s STARK falling as much as 16%.

Edited by Sam Reynolds.

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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