The past four weeks have been brutal for bitcoin BTC$66,558.37 traders as prices keep chasing comments by President Donald Trump, who can’t make up his mind about Iran.
One day, he talks peace and BTC and risk assets go up while oil drops, the next day he talks hawkish again, sending BTC down and oil up. Meanwhile, Iran declares the Strait of Hormuz is “closed forever,” and analysts throw out wildly bullish and bearish oil targets. It’s nearly impossible to navigate this choppy environment.
Traders may be better off focusing on the following real indicators that actually matter. These, unfortunately, do not paint a positive picture for risk assets, including bitcoin.
The mid-April SPR cliff
The fate of the global economy and risk assets could hinge on the next couple of weeks as a managed oil disruption threatens to become an unmanaged one.
After the Iran war began on Feb. 28, tanker traffic through the pivotal Strait of Hormuz, which handles roughly 20% of the world’s seaborne oil trade, all but collapsed. In response, the International Energy Agency’s 32 member nations agreed to the largest coordinated strategic stock release in its 50‑year history – about 400 million barrels, later raised to 426 million as more countries pitched in.
Those emergency barrels have been offsetting a supply shortfall of roughly 4.5 to 5 million barrels per day, the gap created by the near‑shutdown of Hormuz flows.
But now those reserves are expected to hit the wall in the next couple of weeks, in which case, that manageable deficit could double to roughly 10 to 11 million barrels per day – the projected deficit due to reserve depletion and disruption of normal flows.
The House of Saud described it as “a shock of unprecedented scale with no obvious buffer left to absorb it.”
So it doesn’t matter whether Trump continues the war against Iran or stops. If oil supplies aren’t materially restored within the next two weeks, we could see massive risk aversion across both crypto and traditional financial markets.
Ship insurance premiums through Hormuz
A ship insurance premium is the payment a shipowner makes to an insurance company to protect against financial losses that could happen while operating the ship.
Insurance costs for navigating the Strait of Hormuz have increased significantly, with reports indicating rates jumping from less than 1% of ship’s value before the war to as high as 7.5% per trip. This means that a $100 million ship now has to pay around $2- $3 million in insurance, versus $250,000 before the conflict.
When premiums drop below 2%, that’s the clearest sign the route is genuinely safer, and it’s time to take risk in markets again. No press conference, briefing, or Truth Social post from Trump can replicate the certainty embedded in those prices.
Tanker traffic
Trump has at times suggested that passage through the Strait of Hormuz can be secured, but so far, there is no clear evidence that tanker traffic has returned to anything like normal volumes.
In fact, only 21 tankers have transited Hormuz since the war began, compared with more than 100 ships daily before the conflict, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
A sustainable rally in risk assets requires this number to pick up materially; until then, Trump’s attempts to calm markets are likely to be short-lived.
Source: https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2026/04/02/bitcoin-traders-keep-chasing-trump-s-iran-noise-the-real-signals-are-elsewhere







