Crypto is often called independent from politics. Reality says otherwise.
Rising tensions between Iran and the United States could trigger global market shock if conflict escalates. Historically, the first reaction to war is always the same: investors rush to liquidity and sell risk assets. Crypto is no exception.
Bitcoin typically drops during the initial panic phase, not because fundamentals change, but because markets shift into risk-off mode. Yet #bitcoin often becomes the first crypto asset to recover as uncertainty grows and the “non-sovereign asset” narrative returns.
#Ethereum usually moves with higher volatility, falling deeper before stabilizing alongside broader markets.
#solana , as a high-risk asset, tends to suffer the sharpest drawdowns when liquidity tightens — but also delivers the strongest rebound once confidence returns.
So the real question isn’t whether prices will fall. It’s this: when fear hits the market and candles turn red, will you exit with the crowd — or act while opportunity still looks like a mistake?