Hormuz oil contagion spreads to 8 major economies and Bitcoin has just one route through


Bitcoin’s path through 2026 now runs through global economic policy.

The disruption around the Strait of Hormuz has moved beyond a commodity-price event and into the machinery of governments.

The International Energy Agency said crude and refined-product exports through the strait had fallen to less than 10% of pre-conflict levels after about 20 million barrels per day moved through the route in 2025, equal to roughly a quarter of global seaborne oil trade.

That is the scale of shock that stops being only a Brent chart.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration now expects Middle East production shut-ins to average 7.5 million b/d in March, peak at 9.1 million b/d in April, and drive a 5.1 million b/d global inventory draw in the second quarter. It also sees Brent averaging $115 a barrel in 2Q26 before easing later in the year.

For Bitcoin, the issue is whether markets treat the oil shock as a force that keeps inflation sticky and financial conditions tight, or as a shock severe enough to pull governments and central banks toward more support.

That fork leaves Bitcoin with two defensible pathways into year-end: a stagflation-driven liquidity squeeze that pushes it back into high-beta collateral behavior, or a policy-accommodation trade that lets it reclaim its scarce-asset narrative.

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The shock has moved into global economic policy

The policy response is already visible. IEA members agreed to release 400 million barrels from emergency stocks, the largest coordinated release in the agency’s history.

The U.S. Department of Energy said the White House authorized 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, with delivery expected to take about 120 days at planned discharge rates.

Supply additions elsewhere do not change the scale problem. Eight OPEC+ members agreed to add 206 thousand b/d in April, a move that may matter at the margin but sits far below the disruption estimates now embedded in EIA’s outlook.

The more important signal is the spread of emergency policy.

The IEA’s 2026 Energy Crisis Policy Response Tracker, updated May 6, lists governments using conservation rules and consumer support to manage fuel stress.

Sri Lanka has introduced QR-based fuel rationing, Korea has odd-even driving restrictions and fuel-price measures, India has LPG and fuel controls, Pakistan has remote-work and public-transport steps, Japan has a subsidy-backed fuel-price cap, Germany has fuel-tax and pricing rules, China has refined-oil price controls, and the UK has heating-oil and industrial support.

The IEA’s separate demand-side report lays out options such as remote work, lower speed limits, public transport, car-access limits, LPG prioritization, and reduced air travel.

Those measures matter for Bitcoin because they shift the oil story from a market-clearing problem to a policy reaction function.

Infographic mapping the Hormuz oil disruption into emergency supply releases, production shortfalls, and government policy responses.Infographic mapping the Hormuz oil disruption into emergency supply releases, production shortfalls, and government policy responses.

Once governments are cutting taxes, capping prices, rationing fuel, releasing reserves, or subsidizing exposed sectors, the macro signal becomes less clean.

Bitcoin is close enough to the key zone that this macro classification matters immediately. CryptoSlate’s market page showed Bitcoin around $80,794 on May 12, with the broader crypto market near $2.69 trillion and BTC dominance around 60%.

Further, ETF inflows, geopolitical risk, U.S. macro data, Fed signals, and oil stress continue to shape sentiment.

Flows still give the upside case something to work with, but they are not an all-clear signal.

The latest fund-flow report showed $117 million of digital-asset product inflows, a fifth consecutive positive week. Bitcoin products attracted $192 million, while Ethereum products saw $81.6 million of outflows.

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The same report noted that four days of outflows were reversed by one strong Friday session, so the flow picture looks resilient but fragile.

That is why the $78,000 to $80,000 area is more than a trading level in this setup. Recent CryptoSlate coverage has tied that band to Bitcoin’s struggle around the Fed, oil-driven inflation pressure, and on-chain supply levels.

If Bitcoin holds it while energy-policy stress stays visible, markets can argue that ETF demand and scarcity narratives are absorbing the macro shock. If it loses the area, the oil shock starts to look less like a debasement trade and more like a real-yield problem.

Two paths now define Bitcoin’s 2026 map

The downside pathway starts with EIA’s oil forecast becoming the macro base case rather than a temporary stress scenario.

Brent at a 2Q26 average of $115, a 5.1 million b/d inventory draw, and multi-million-barrel-per-day shut-ins would keep energy in the inflation conversation even if reserve releases ease the first hit.

Governments can soften the pain with subsidies, tax relief, price caps, direct sector aid, and fuel rules. Those measures can also preserve demand, add fiscal cost, and make it harder for central banks to treat the shock as a clean one-off.

In that version of the year, rate cuts are delayed, real yields stay firm, the dollar remains hard to fight, and Bitcoin trades less like digital scarcity and more like collateral in a risk book.

ETF demand is the transmission channel to watch. CoinShares’ Bitcoin inflow number shows that the bid has not disappeared, but the midweek outflows show how quickly macro caution can drain participation.

If energy inflation keeps Fed expectations tight and ETF flows fade or reverse, Bitcoin does not need a crypto-specific failure to move lower. It only needs the macro backdrop to force de-risking.

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