Oil shock could send Bitcoin down 45% if price surge forces Fed to delay cuts


President Donald Trump projected four to five weeks for the conflict with Iran to come to an end. The market priced its playbook: headline shock, brief spike, diplomatic theater, then normalization.

That script worked in 2019 when drones hit Saudi Aramco facilities, and Brent jumped 15% only to surrender the entire gain within weeks. Traders bought the panic, sold the resolution, and moved on.

Brent crude comparison chart shows the 2026 US-Israel-Iran conflict maintaining a 17% price surge through day six, diverging from the 2019 Aramco attack’s rapid reversal pattern.

However, six days into the US/Israel-Iran escalation, Brent is at $85.49, up 17% from the $73 pre-strike anchor price. The question traders can’t answer is whether this resolves before week four or stretches past week seven.

That’s 50 days, the threshold where the nature of the shock fundamentally changes.

The distinction between a three-week disruption and a seven-week conflict matters more than the current price. Macquarie’s commodity desk frames the inflection cleanly: the global system absorbs a Hormuz disruption for one to two weeks without structural economic damage.

Pain accelerates past week three. Week four becomes the cliff where risk premium transforms into an inflation story that central banks can’t ignore.

By week seven, 50 days, the test is whether the Federal Reserve can deliver its projected June rate cut or must hold the line at 3.75% to prevent inflation expectations from breaking loose.

For Bitcoin, which has spent the past months riding the “Fed pivot” narrative as its primary bullish catalyst, the shift from a liquidity tailwind to a liquidity stall represents a headwind the asset has no mechanism to avoid.

The transmission mechanism no one wants to price

Oil moves through the Strait of Hormuz, channeling roughly 20% of global oil flows and a similar share of LNG. Geography converts regional conflict into a global supply constraint.

JPMorgan flags that a prolonged Hormuz closure threatens 3.3 million barrels per day, modeling how physical tightness translates into macro repricing that forces its way into central bank frameworks.

Asian refining margins telegraph the stress. Complex margins hit $30 per barrel, jet fuel cracks above $52, and gasoil above $48. These levels indicate refiners can’t source alternatives.

China asked refiners to halt export contracts and cancel shipments to protect domestic supply amid a spike in wholesale prices. Diesel jumped 13.5% in one week, gasoline 11%.

Japan’s refiners requested access to strategic stockpiles even as officials signaled that no immediate release was planned. The request shows actors with physical exposure pricing the possibility that this extends long enough to strain inventories.

Duration rewrites impact. A $10 spike reversing in 10 days is noise. A $15 move persisting 50 days forces into inflation prints, into expectations surveys central banks monitor, into the rate path governing system liquidity.

Allianz quantifies the threshold: beyond four to six weeks, implications compound. At three months, recession risk shifts from tail to base case.

Every 10% sustained oil move adds 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points to CPI. Pushing Brent from $73 to $100 is equivalent to a half-point inflation impulse, keeping the Fed at 3.75% through 2026 and abandoning the June cut.

Refining cracksRefining cracks
Asian refining margins hit multi-year highs with jet fuel cracks above $52 and gasoil above $48 per barrel, reflecting severe physical market tightness.

What $100, $125, and $150 actually mean

Markets don’t need to speculate. Multiple banks have stress-tested the scenarios, their price targets mapping to escalating economic damage.

At $100, Brent jumps 37% above the $73 baseline, and the scenario is in prolonged-disruption territory, where the risk premium persists without collapsing the economy.

Goldman Sachs modeled this as a severe case. Allianz uses it as the threshold where Fed cuts evaporate.

From today’s $85.49, $100 would require an 18.6% increase, which is plausible if Hormuz remains contested or if infrastructure damage compounds shipping constraints.

That level implies 37% crude climb from baseline, generating a 0.5 to 0.7 percentage-point inflation impulse. The Fed’s 2026 easing path rests on inflation grinding toward 2%.

A half-point shock doesn’t permanently break that, but delays cuts from June to the fourth quarter, or eliminates them if oil stays elevated through summer.

At $120 to $150, framing shifts from “inflation complication” to “growth threat.” Bernstein discussed this as an extreme, prolonged conflict in which infrastructure is targeted and shipping adapts slowly.

At $125 Brent, up 48.2%, the inflation impulse climbs to 0.8-1.6 percentage points. Economists deploy “meaningful drag” and “material damage.” Earnings forecasts get revised down. Equities reprice as discount rates move against risk assets.

Bitcoin accelerates that repricing, trading as levered beta to liquidity.

At $150, it’s a recession prep. The 77.9% move implies 1.3 to 2.6 percentage points added to CPI. Central banks debate whether to hike into a slowdown to prevent unanchoring.

The 2008 oil spike to $147 preceded easing only after crude collapsed, and the crisis forced central banks’ hands. Initial response to $140+ was tightening bias.

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