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#Gate广场四月发帖挑战
The impact of the U.S. fighter jet crash in Iran (April 3, 2026) on the cryptocurrency market is generally short-term negative pressure, but it is unlikely to trigger a sharp crash. Below is a segmented analysis based on current market data:
Short-term Market Response (within 24-48 hours after the event)
Bitcoin (BTC) remains in a narrow range of $66,000-$67,000, with slight downward pressure after the incident (initially dropping about 0.5%-2%), and mainstream coins like Ethereum (ETH) also experienced minor pullbacks.
The total market capitalization of cryptocurrencies slightly shrank, trading volume modestly increased, but there was no large-scale panic selling or chain reactions of liquidations.
The Fear and Greed Index remains at a very low level (around 8-12), indicating that market sentiment has already priced in geopolitical risks, and the new event is more of a “confirmation hit” rather than an unexpected black swan.
Core Logic:
Geopolitical escalation → Risk appetite declines → Short-term capital outflows from risk assets (cryptocurrencies are viewed as high-beta risk assets rather than safe havens).
Oil prices rise in tandem (affected by the Strait of Hormuz risk), boosting inflation expectations, which suppresses the Fed’s rate cut prospects, further weakening risk assets.
Comparison with Previous Conflicts
Since the start of the U.S.-Israel military action against Iran in late February 2026, the crypto market has experienced similar shocks multiple times:
At the onset of conflict, Bitcoin often drops quickly (4%-8%), accompanied by leveraged liquidations.
Subsequently, there is often a rapid rebound, sometimes outperforming traditional assets (due to market pre-pricing or viewing the conflict as a sign of long-term liquidity easing).
This crash event is part of the “fester” stage of conflict escalation, not a new upgrade, so the impact is less than the initial strikes in late February. Trump’s clear statement that “it will not affect negotiations” also alleviates some worst-case expectations.
Main Impact Channels:
Oil and macro linkage: Short-term spike in oil prices (possibly above $100), increasing global inflation pressure → risk assets come under pressure. The crypto market has a high correlation with US stocks and Nasdaq, which have already weakened with the stock market correction.
Safe-haven vs. risk asset attributes: In this conflict, Bitcoin is more of a “risk asset” rather than “digital gold.” Traditional safe-haven assets like gold benefit more, while cryptocurrencies fluctuate with risk appetite.
Leverage and Liquidity: High leverage positions are more susceptible to triggers, but the current market is in a low-volatility consolidation phase, so liquidation scale is expected to be limited (non-systemic).
Long-term potential benefits: If the conflict prolongs, it may force central banks to increase liquidity injections (money printing), which historically is bullish for Bitcoin in the medium to long term. However, short-term “war premiums” remain predominantly negative.
Outlook and Risk Warnings:
Most likely scenario: Short-term continued narrow fluctuations or slight dips (support around $65,000 for BTC), awaiting rescue operations, new negotiations, or non-farm payroll data catalysts. If Trump signals further negotiation progress or signs of conflict easing, the crypto market may rebound.
Negative risks: If rescue operations trigger additional friction, or Iran responds more aggressively, causing oil prices to surge further, BTC could test lower supports (around $60,000-$63,000).
Positive catalysts: Any clear signals of “negotiation progress” or “war ending soon” could trigger a rapid recovery in the crypto market (historically, easing news often leads to 3%-8% rebounds).
Overall, this event’s impact on the crypto market is limited and manageable, representing routine volatility amid geopolitical conflicts rather than a trend reversal. The market has already adapted to such news, and future developments depend more on macro data (non-farm payrolls, oil price trends) and actual negotiation progress.
Cryptocurrency market volatility remains high, and geopolitical events amplify uncertainties. The above analysis is based on public market data and historical patterns for reference only and does not constitute investment advice.