Bitcoin fell sharply over the weekend as joint U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran triggered a broad sell-off across global markets.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
The world’s largest cryptocurrency dropped to around $63,255 on Saturday, a roughly 6.5% decline, before recovering to reclaim the $67,000 level by Monday.
By early Monday morning, BTC was trading at around $66,197, down about 2.1% on the day.
The strikes included the reported killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — news that briefly pushed Bitcoin above $68,000 before the move faded.
Iran responded with multiple waves of missile strikes targeting U.S. and Israeli military installations. President Trump said the campaign would continue as long as necessary.
Ethereum fell roughly 10% in the wake of the attacks, trading near $1,950 on Sunday.
Crude oil markets reacted sharply to the conflict. Brent crude jumped as much as 13% and West Texas Intermediate rose nearly 10% on Sunday night.
Gold climbed around 2%, reaching multi-week highs as investors moved into safe-haven assets.
Sean Farrell, head of digital assets at Fundstrat, said geopolitical sell-offs are typically buyable, but flagged crude oil as the key risk variable. He warned that any disruption to shipping lanes or energy flows could weigh further on Bitcoin.
U.S. stock futures also fell during Asian trading hours, pointing to a weaker Wall Street open.
Bitcoin traders are now watching a packed U.S. economic calendar. The ISM Manufacturing report lands Monday, followed by ADP payrolls and ISM Services on Wednesday.
The main event is Friday’s Nonfarm Payrolls report, which frequently moves Treasury yields and the dollar — both of which can impact Bitcoin’s price.
On the charts, BTC is forming what analysts describe as a bear pennant after its drop from the $73,000–$74,000 area. The pattern suggests the asset may stay range-bound between $63,000 and $69,000 in the near term.
A breakdown from that range could target the $51,800–$52,000 support zone, according to technical projections.
Bitcoin is down 23% year-to-date and has posted five straight months of losses. It peaked at an all-time high of $126,000 in October.
Some Wall Street analysts now see a scenario where BTC falls toward $50,000 before any potential recovery in the second half of the year.
As of Monday, BTC was last trading around $65,961.
The post Bitcoin (BTC) Price: Drops Below $66,000 as U.S.-Israel Strikes on Iran Rattle Markets appeared first on CoinCentral.


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