Bitcoin (BTC) ended Monday back above $73,000, fully erasing a sharp weekend sell-off that pushed it as low as $70,600.

According to CoinGecko data, BTC was trading at $73,260 as of 4:50pm EDT, up more than 3% over the prior 24 hours. The recovery came as US equity markets staged their own comeback, with the S&P 500 gaining 1.02% to close at 6,886.24 and the Nasdaq adding 1.23% to finish at 23,183.74.

The trigger for both the sell-off and the recovery was the same event: the United States naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

Why The Strait Of Hormuz Matters More Than You Think

The sell-off began Saturday night when US Vice President JD Vance left Pakistan without a peace agreement, and President Donald Trump ordered the Navy to blockade all maritime traffic accessing Iranian ports. The blockade took formal effect at 10am ET on Monday morning, per US CENTCOM.

The Strait of Hormuz is the world's single most critical oil transit chokepoint, roughly 20% of global crude passes through it daily. Markets reacted immediately. WTI crude futures surged as high as $105 per barrel on Sunday, its largest single-session spike since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, while Brent crude climbed 6.95% to above $101.

Bitcoin tracked the fear almost perfectly, dropping approximately 4% from its pre-weekend levels as traders repositioned into defensive instruments.

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Oil Retreats, Crypto Bounces, But Is The Risk Over?

By Monday's close, oil had surrendered a large portion of those gains, with WTI pulling back to approximately $96–$98 per barrel.

Crypto followed the same arc upward.

Ether (ETH), Solana (SOL) and XRP all finished Monday in positive territory, and crypto equities were among the session's strongest performers, Circle (CRCL) ended the day up 8.94%.

The recovery was real, but context matters. Bitcoin's correlation to the S&P 500 has remained elevated throughout early 2026, meaning macro fear still overrides any digital gold narrative when geopolitical shocks arrive. Activity on CME Bitcoin futures, a reliable barometer of institutional positioning, currently sits at a 14-month low, signalling that professional traders remain cautious even as spot prices recovered.

What Traders Are Watching Next

The Hormuz situation is far from settled. CENTCOM confirmed it will not impede vessels transiting to non-Iranian ports, but the blockade on Iranian port traffic remains active.

Oil market volatility is unlikely to calm quickly, and as long as that uncertainty holds, Bitcoin's correlation to equities means it will continue moving in lockstep with macro sentiment, not against it.

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