Bitcoin Price Crashes Below $103,000—What Triggered It?
13 Junho 2025 - 8:00AM
NEWSBTC
After hitting $110,450 on Monday, the Bitcoin price is writing its
third consecutive red day as the benchmark cryptocurrency fell 5.3%
from an intra-day top of $108,450 to a trough of $102,664 before
clawing back to about $104,456 by press time. The sell-off
coincided, almost minute-for-minute, with confirmation that Israel
had conducted large-scale air-strikes on Iranian nuclear
installations, sending ripples through every major asset class. Why
Is Bitcoin Going Down Today? Israel’s pre-dawn operation — its
first overt attack on Iranian territory since the October-2024
raids — instantly repriced global risk. Oil futures jumped more
than 10%, spot gold printed a fresh record high above $3,400 an
ounce, and US equity futures slid roughly 1.5%. Bitcoin’s draw-down
resembled its initial reaction to Iran’s failed missile barrage on
Israel in April. Related Reading: Bitcoin Nears All-Time High as
Whale Behavior Suggests Further Upside “Oil up. Gold up. Bitcoin
down,” Anthony Pompliano wrote on X, noting that the pattern echoes
April’s missile incident, after which “Bitcoin ended up
outperforming the other two over the first 48 hours.” Bitcoin
educator Peter Duan argued in a separate post that “a dip in
Bitcoin happens every time there is serious geopolitical [turmoil]
… In the long run, this will only push more people to Bitcoin,”
pointing to the 24/7 nature of crypto trading versus the
still-closed equity cash markets. Macro strategist Joe Consorti
drilled down on the mechanics: “Bitcoin, S&P and NDX are all
being panic-sold. Crude oil, natural gas, gold and US Treasuries
are all spiking higher. The flight to safety trade is here.” A
fresh surge in crude is precisely what US policymakers did not
need. West Texas Intermediate vaulted past $77 a barrel—its first
visit to that level in four months—after Israel struck Iranian
nuclear facilities, erasing much of the hard-won disinflation
dividend and dragging energy back to centre stage. The contract is
now more than $21 above its April trough, threatening to unwind the
benign price trends that had been taking hold. This comes after US
inflation data once again surprised to the upside this week. May’s
Consumer Price Index rose just 0.1% on the month and 2.4%
year-over-year, while core CPI matched that modest 0.1% gain and
held at 2.8% on an annual basis. Producer prices told a similar
tale on Thursday, with the headline PPI up only 0.1%
month-over-month and 2.6% on the year, both below consensus
expectations. Related Reading: Bitcoin Is Wildly Undervalued, Says
Bitwise: ‘Fair Price’ Today Is $230,000 Lower fuel costs had been a
cornerstone of President Trump’s strategy for reining in inflation;
the renewed march higher in oil now threatens that narrative. If
energy continues to climb, markets will anticipate a rebound in
headline inflation and the Federal Reserve may feel compelled to
postpone the rate-cut cycle traders had pencilled in for September.
Bitcoin, which is acutely sensitive to fluctuations in global
liquidity, often underperforms when the policy outlook tilts toward
tighter financial conditions—explaining its abrupt slide alongside
the spike in crude. The newsflow triggered one of the heaviest
forced-liquidation washes of 2025. CoinGlass data show that roughly
$1.14 billion in crypto futures positions were wiped out over the
past 24 hours, $1.04 billion of which were longs, as 236,788
traders were forced out of the market. The single-largest hit was a
$201 million BTC-USDT long on Binance, the biggest one-ticket
liquidation since January. For Bitcoin alone, long-side
liquidations totalled $443 million. For the entire crypto market,
this is the worst wipe-out since the post-tariff rout of February
3, when $1.25 billion was liquidated across the complex. Featured
image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
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