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Bitcoin's price has pulled back to $76,600 after nearing $80,000, influenced by rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions involving Iran. Major altcoins like ether, XRP, and solana also experienced declines.
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The bitcoin BTC$76,681.01 rally toward $80,000 didn’t last long on Monday, with prices slipping back to $76,600 during the U.S. session as geopolitical tensions crept back into focus.
After trading near $80,000 overnight, its highest level since early February, the largest cryptocurrency reversed course and was down about 1.5% over the past 24 hours. Major altcoins followed, with ether (ETH), XRP and solana (SOL) each falling around 3%. CoinDesk 20 Index, a benchmark for the broader digital assets market, fell about 2% on Monday.
The pullback comes as investors grow cautious about the outlook for U.S.-Iran negotiations and the ongoing disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, a key global oil transit route.
According to a Wall Street Journal report, Iran has proposed halting attacks on ships in the strait in exchange for a full end to the war, including lifting the U.S. naval blockade and delaying nuclear talks. The proposal aims to restart stalled negotiations, but uncertainty remains high after President Trump on Saturday canceled sending envoys to Pakistan for negotiating with the Iranian side.
Oil prices continued to rise during the day. Brent crude oil prices, often used as the international benchmark, climbed more than 3% to $107 a barrel, while the West Texas Intermediate crude oil was up 2.6% to $97.
The Nasdaq edged 0.3% lower in morning trading, pulling back from recent record highs, while the S&P 500 was flat, ahead of a big earnings week that includes Mag7 firms such as Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft and Apple.
Meanwhile, crypto-linked stocks declined across the board. Shares of crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) fell 1.5%, while Circle (CRCL), issuer of the USDC stablecoin, dropped 3.5% and Galaxy Digital (GLXY), a digital asset investment firm, slid nearly 6%.
Under the surface, bitcoin's price action points to a market struggling to build momentum despite strong institutional demand.
Bitfinex analysts noted that short-term BTC holders sitting in profit have been selling into strength, offsetting fresh demand from ETF buyers and Strategy (MSTR).
"The path of least resistance in the near term is likely consolidation or a pullback toward the $75,000 region," the analysts said, adding that "a decisive break above $80,000 [is] required to confirm a more durable bullish regime."
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Bitcoin's price drop was influenced by rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions related to U.S.-Iran negotiations.
Major altcoins such as ether (ETH), XRP, and solana (SOL) each fell around 3% following Bitcoin's decline.
Brent crude oil prices rose over 3% to $107 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude oil increased by 2.6% to $97.

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