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Pay attention to Bitcoin's momentum this week. The price jumped from $64,000 to $68,000 within hours after news from Iran. It temporarily dropped due to geopolitical tensions but immediately rebounded sharply when Iran's government media confirmed that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in an airstrike. The $4,000 movement in thin liquidity means the market cap shifted around $80 billion. Crazy. What’s interesting is how traders interpret this situation. They seem to be betting that the leadership vacuum in Iran will make escalation more difficult, not the other way around. Logically, it makes sense – a leadership vacuum usually means a more complicated and slower decision-making process. According to Iran’s constitution, the interim council composed of the president, judiciary head, and Guardian Council members will handle operations until the Assembly of Experts chooses a replacement. The process has no fixed deadline. This is the wild card – the longer the transition, the greater the uncertainty. Trump has also told Iranians to overthrow the regime, saying this might be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Tehran is still launching missiles at Israel, and Israel is still responding. But Bitcoin moved first before clarity on the next military move. The move to $68,000 happened on Sunday with thin volume. One main headline triggered all this. What I notice is – the crypto market is viewing this situation as a de-escalation play, not a war play. If the leadership transition makes decision stabilization more likely, risk assets will get support. Conversely, if the market thinks this will destabilize the regime or interrupt energy supply, inflation expectations will rise and put pressure on crypto. Iran accounts for about a third of global crude oil exports. So oil futures and equity markets will be important barometers to see if this optimism holds or is just a flash move. Oil futures and equities opened on Sunday. If energy prices spike due to fears of supply disruption, that’s usually bad for risk assets including crypto. But if traders believe the succession will be smooth and war can be avoided, crypto could get tailwinds. Recent updates show Bitcoin holding around $74,000 amid a recovery in global risk appetite. Asia equity benchmarks and the S&P 500 have rebounded from conflict-related losses. This is a positive sign for risk-on momentum. From a crypto legal and regulatory perspective, geopolitical situations like this serve as a reminder of how sensitive markets are to headlines and policy uncertainty. Inflows into US spot Bitcoin ETFs also remain strong, with over $56 billion accumulated. That’s solid structural support. So I see this as an interesting test case – the market is currently pricing in the best-case scenario. But if oil markets or equity markets give different signals, Bitcoin could face pressure. Worth monitoring closely in the coming hours.