When Iran's Situation Escalates, Why Does Bitcoin Rise Instead?



Many people don't understand:

Middle East tensions rise, missiles fly back and forth—theoretically bearish, so why is Bitcoin strengthening?

The logic is actually quite pragmatic, just three points.

First, loss of confidence in local currency.

Under prolonged sanctions and war risks, Iran's domestic currency continues to depreciate.

Banking systems also face risks of freezes and withdrawal limits.

When residents lose confidence in their local currency and banks, the first instinct is—exchange for assets.

Not to make money, but to preserve value and protect themselves.

Second, Bitcoin has "portability."

Gold is hard to carry, dollars are difficult to exchange, cross-border transfers may be intercepted.

But Bitcoin doesn't need banking channels or dependence on the domestic financial system.

As long as there's internet and a private key, assets can be transferred.

In volatile environments, this "rapid transferability" attribute is more important than price movements.

Third, short-term capital flight amplifies buy pressure.

Local exchange outflows are normally limited, but once conflicts escalate, withdrawal demand surges.

Large amounts of capital concentrate on buying in and transferring to self-custody wallets, creating a short-term buying frenzy.

When buying pressure concentrates in a local market, it pushes prices higher.

So this kind of appreciation isn't fundamentally speculative sentiment, but rather a risk-aversion need.

In stable countries, Bitcoin is an investment;

In volatile regions, Bitcoin is more like an "emergency exit."

The greater the uncertainty, the more value decentralized assets gain.#比特币站上七万美元
BTC3,05%
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