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Bitcoin Falls Below 200‑Week Moving Average After USIran Escalation

Renewed US strikes on Iran lifted oil prices and revived inflation fears; this curbed demand for riskier assets, forcing long crypto positions to be liquidated.

Overview

  • Bitcoin slid about 3–4% on July 13 to roughly $61,800–$62,500 as markets reacted to renewed US attacks on Iran that pushed Brent crude above $79 a barrel.
  • The jump in oil prices revived worries that inflation could rise and that the Federal Reserve might delay near‑term rate cuts, which reduced investor appetite for volatile assets like Bitcoin.
  • The price drop pushed Bitcoin back below its 200‑week moving average, a technical level traders watch as a signal of longer vulnerability, and coincided with an acceleration of leveraged long liquidations.
  • US‑listed spot Bitcoin ETFs logged roughly $197 million of net inflows last week, but those flows are concentrated in a few large funds, making institutional support fragile if market stress continues.
  • Traders say the US Consumer Price Index release and Fed commentary this week are the key near‑term catalysts that could either reverse the selloff or deepen volatility and outflows.