Frustrated driver at a gas pump with a line of cars behind him at sunset, reflecting the strain of oil nearing $100 and the broader pressure it could put on Bitcoin this week

Bitcoin price surges to $78k even as oil rises again creating new setup – what you need to know

Published 3 min read

Bitcoin is entering a fresh macro test as higher oil prices feed inflation fears, lift yields, and push Fed cuts further out.

On Apr. 21, Brent crude price rose 5.4% and closed at $99.89, touching an intraday high of $102.16.

The driver for this movement was that shipping through the Strait of Hormuz stayed severely impaired, with reports noting that only three ships transited in the prior 24 hours, down from approximately 140 daily before the conflict began.

The IEA's Fatih Birol called it the largest energy crisis in history and coordinated a record release of 400 million barrels from strategic reserves in March.

The energy shock is already producing tangible side effects for financial markets, with March US retail sales beating expectations, driven largely by a 15.5% surge in gasoline station receipts tied to war-driven fuel prices.

The oil shock connects to consumer-level inflation in concrete terms and reinforces what the rates market has already priced.

The channel for Bitcoin this week
Brent crude closed at $99.89 on April 21, rising 5.4% on the session and touching an intraday high of $102.16, as Hormuz traffic collapsed to three ships in 24 hours against a pre-conflict daily average of roughly 140.

The rates channel

This week, Bitcoin is trading on the probability that oil stays high long enough to keep inflation sticky, yields firm, and Fed rate cuts are delayed further than markets had anticipated.

Fed funds futures had priced two quarter-point cuts by December as recently as late February. As of Apr. 21, futures were pricing only a 30% chance of a single 25 basis point cut for the full year.

That repricing of the rate path traces directly to the war's effect on energy costs. On the same day, the 10-year Treasury yield was 4.313%, and the 2-year yield was 3.802%, both higher on the session.

On Apr. 21, oil rose, the dollar strengthened, Treasury yields climbed, and Bitcoin stayed stuck. Even classical inflation hedges buckled, with gold dropping 2%, as higher real financing conditions and dollar strength overpowered the usual narrative.

Deutsche Bank made the downstream risk explicit on an Apr. 17 call, arguing that the Fed may hold rates unchanged through 2026 due to oil-driven inflation.

When a ceasefire development on Apr. 7 pushed Brent down to $92.55 on the next day, yields fell, traders rebuilt 50% odds of a Fed cut by year-end, and Bitcoin rose 2.95% to $72,738.16.

That sequence confirmed that the transmission channel is that softer oil eases the rate path, and an easier rate path lifts BTC.

Macro variableApr. 21 reading / shiftWhy it matters for BTC
Brent crudeClosed at $99.89, touched $102.16 intradayHigher oil raises inflation pressure and hardens the macro headwind
Fed pathFrom two quarter-point cuts by December in late February to only a 30% chance of one 25 bp cut for the full yearLess expected easing means less liquidity support for BTC
10-year Treasury yield4.313%Higher long-end yields tighten financial conditions
2-year Treasury yield3.802%Higher front-end yields reflect a more restrictive rate outlook
DollarStrengthened on Apr. 21A firmer dollar is typically a headwind for Bitcoin and other risk assets
GoldFell 2%Shows even classic inflation hedges were pressured by yields and dollar strength
BitcoinRecovered toward the high-$70,000s, trading around $78,000 on Apr. 22Confirms macro sensitivity, though not outright capitulation
Ceasefire comparisonOn Apr. 8, Brent fell to $92.55, cut odds improved, and BTC rose 2.95% to $72,738.16Reinforces the transmission channel: softer oil → easier rate path → stronger BTC

Hormuz disruption is measured and documented, the inflation pass-through is visible in retail sales data, and futures markets track the Fed repricing. What stays open is how Bitcoin resolves the tension between those headwinds and its current position around $78,000.

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Two moves for this week

If Brent holds above $100 and the 2-year Treasury yield continues to climb from its current 3.80%, the market prices in stickier inflation, fewer cuts, and tighter liquidity conditions.

Bitcoin trades lower, retests support back toward the mid-$70,000s, and confirms the view that BTC is a high-beta expression of rate expectations. The Apr. 21 pattern of oil up, dollar up, yields up, and BTC down plays out again with more conviction.

That is the more straightforward near-term case because the war-driven repricing of the Fed path has already done most of the structural work.

The bullish case becomes concrete if Brent stays near $100, Hormuz stays impaired, yields hold elevated, and Bitcoin nonetheless holds flat or firms around $78,000 while equities and gold stay under pressure.

The resilience would constitute evidence of relative strength under a textbook macro headwind. A week of that kind of firmness, accumulated against persistent oil stress, would weaken the “oil up equals BTC down” template that the war has established.

ScenarioWhat Brent doesWhat yields doWhat BTC doesWhat the market concludes
Bear / macro pressure winsHolds above $1002-year yield climbs above current 3.80% areaBTC breaks below the mid-$70,000s and retests lower supportBitcoin is still trading like a high-beta rate-sensitive asset
Bull / relative strength emergesStays near $100 but does not accelerateYields stay elevated rather than collapsingBTC holds flat or firms around $78,000Bitcoin is showing resilience despite a textbook macro headwind

Bitcoin's Apr. 21 session already demonstrated it trades as a macro-sensitive asset in this setup. Relative strength sustained over a week would carry more weight, given the unfriendly macro conditions and the firmness that still occurred.

The three numbers to track closely this week are Brent, the 2-year Treasury yield, and Bitcoin's ability to hold the upper-$70,000s.