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Oil spikes, bonds crash, Bitcoin drops: Here is what comes next

Bitcoin’s retreat to US$76,632.16 reflects more than a routine correction. It captures a moment when geopolitical friction, macro uncertainty, and technical structure converged to test market conviction. The trigger came from escalating tensions between the United States and Iran. A social media warning from Donald Trump stating that time is running out for Tehran abruptly shifted sentiment.

Risk assets wobbled as Brent crude surged above US$112 per barrel before cooling toward US$107 to US$109, following diplomatic appeals from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE that prompted a temporary pause in military action. That energy spike reignited inflation concerns and pushed expectations toward a higher-for-longer Federal Reserve policy, a headwind for any asset that thrives on abundant liquidity.

The macro shock exposed fragile positioning in crypto markets. Over US$607 million in bullish long positions were forcefully liquidated within 24 hours, part of a broader US$677 million wave of leveraged crypto long liquidations. When price fails to hold key levels, algorithmic selling and margin calls can accelerate moves far beyond fundamental justification. Bitcoin’s inability to clear its 200-day moving average near US$82,000 added technical pressure.

That rejection dragged the asset down to a critical support zone around US$76,000. Analysts note this level must hold to prevent a steeper structural breakdown toward US$65,000. The 200-week moving average near US$69,000 serves as a long-term trend reference, not a magnetic target price to be hit. Moving averages smooth past action; they do not dictate future paths.

The current weekly chart signals weakening momentum rather than outright capitulation. Price trades below shorter-term exponential moving averages but remains well above the 200-week trend line. The MACD indicator appears relatively controlled, suggesting the selloff lacks the extreme divergence often seen at major bottoms or tops. In strong trends, Bitcoin frequently establishes higher lows long before testing its slowest averages.

A move toward the low US$70,000s remains realistic if risk sentiment deteriorates further, but declaring US$61,000 inevitable simply because the 200-week moving average exists feels oversimplified. Markets respect context, and right now that context includes a regulatory landscape that is quietly evolving.

While traders navigate short-term volatility, Washington advanced a potentially transformative piece of legislation. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, known as the CLARITY Act, cleared a key hurdle when the Senate Banking Committee approved it in a bipartisan 15 to nine vote. This markup represents the first time a comprehensive crypto market structure bill has gained such momentum in the Senate.

The legislation aims to split oversight between the SEC and CFTC, define which digital assets qualify as digital commodities, and establish clearer registration and compliance frameworks for exchanges, brokers, and custodians. Provisions like a mature blockchain test and safe harbours for developers and noncustodial wallets seek to protect open source projects and peer-to-peer usage. If enacted broadly as described, large networks such as Bitcoin could receive clearer commodity treatment, easing institutional participation and exchange compliance.

Significant hurdles remain before the CLARITY Act becomes law. The bill must be merged with a separate Senate Agriculture Committee version, then secure 60 votes on the Senate floor, which requires at least seven Democratic votes. Ethics disputes over officials’ crypto holdings, the treatment of DeFi protocols and stablecoins, and a tight calendar window from June to early August, before recess and election politics intensify, all pose challenges.

Galaxy Digital’s research arm currently estimates a three-in-four chance that the bill becomes law in 2026, with an optimistic window for a presidential signature around early August if Congress moves quickly. For crypto participants, the critical signal will be whether Senate leaders schedule and win that 60-vote floor passage in the coming weeks. Without it, current momentum can still stall.

Global financial markets mirrored this fragmentation on 19 May 2026. US equity indices finished mixed as money rotated out of high-flying technology names and into defensive assets. The S&P 500 edged down 0.07 per cent to 7,403.05 while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.51 per cent to 26,090.73, dragged by a sharp correction in semiconductors. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.32 per cent to 49,686.12, supported by energy and traditional industrial components. Fixed-income markets drove much of the anxiety.

The US 10-year Treasury yield briefly breached 4.60 per cent, a fresh one-year high, while 30-year yields hovered above 5.10 per cent. Hotter-than-expected inflation metrics tied to Middle East tensions led traders to price in no 2026 rate cuts, with some shifting bets toward a potential hike later this year. International bond markets echoed the stress, with Japanese Government Bond 30-year yields touching multi-decade highs and UK Gilts experiencing similar spikes.

Sector performance highlighted the rotation. Memory chip and AI infrastructure names were hit hard after Seagate management expressed near-term supply-chain and demand constraints. Seagate fell roughly seven per cent to eight per cent, Micron declined six per cent, and Nvidia slipped two per cent ahead of its highly anticipated earnings release.

Meanwhile, defensive sectors and energy giants like Chevron gained ground, helping rescue the Dow. The equal-weighted S&P 500 notably outperformed its tech-heavy cap-weighted counterpart, underscoring the breadth of the rotation. In commodities, Brent crude cooled slightly as geopolitical fears eased marginally, while spot gold managed a slight rebound near US$4,589 per ounce, finding support from central bank accumulation despite a firmer US dollar.

These crosscurrents matter for Bitcoin’s path. The asset does not trade in isolation. It reacts to real yields, dollar strength, risk sentiment, and regulatory signals.

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