Bitcoin traded largely unchanged in Asian trading on Monday after coming off weekend losses, with the largest cryptocurrency last recorded up 0.3% at $67,226.8 by 23:53 ET (03:53 GMT). Earlier in the session it had slipped below $66,000 before stabilizing.
The token had finished the previous week on a stronger note compared with other risk assets, but that momentum waned over the weekend as market participants reacted to escalating geopolitical tensions.
Oil prices surged sharply on Monday, pushing crude above $110 per barrel. The move followed intensifying military exchanges between U.S.-Israeli forces and Iran, which raised concerns about potential sustained disruptions to oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz - a pivotal shipping corridor. That jump in energy costs revived worries about global inflation and complicated the outlook for major central banks, which had been expected to gradually ease monetary policy this year.
Bitcoin has behaved like a high-beta risk asset during this episode of macro uncertainty, a characteristic that makes it vulnerable when investors retreat from riskier positions. Equity markets reflected that risk-off tone: Asian stocks tumbled in early trade on Monday, while Wall Street futures were down more than 2% at the same time.
The weekend decline in the cryptocurrency also underscored a structural feature of digital asset markets - they operate around the clock, enabling investors to react immediately to geopolitical developments even when traditional financial markets are closed.
Other major cryptocurrencies were mixed during the session. Ethereum advanced 1.5% to $1,977.50, while XRP inched up 0.2% to $1.35.
Market participants will be watching how sustained the rise in energy prices becomes and whether central banks alter the timing or pace of policy easing in response to renewed inflationary pressure. For now, Bitcoin remains range-bound near the mid-$67,000s as broader macro forces exert influence on risk appetite.