Boris Pasternak Slams Bitcoin’s Sickness While Trump Pauses Iran Conspiracy!

Donald Trump’s temporary lull in the Iran drama has turned the crypto market into a campfire story-no one knows which way the smoke will blow, and Bitcoin is already flickering with unease.

On the 26th of March, Bitcoin hovered around $68,900, slipping roughly three tenths of a percent in a day. The chart was a steady crowd of sellers, as if the market were a choir nervously muttering under its breath. That dip is a symptom of something larger than any one green‑back narrative.

The true driver of this melancholy is hiding in plain sight: the bond market.

U.S. Treasury yields have peeled back to about 4.42%, a number that whispers of inflation lurking beneath the surface and of rate cuts that feel like a distant lullaby. Higher yields are the shadow that forces liquidity to retreat, leaving Bitcoin’s high‑risk character bartering for survival.

In simple terms, the climb in yields drags the liquid curtain away from crypto.

Meanwhile, the Iran‑oil tension keeps gasoline prices marching upward, gnawing at inflation expectations and tightening the Federal Reserve’s levers even further.

Markets have already priced in the predicted tightening, squeezing the financial reeds that once fluttered in hope.

This makes the horizon for Bitcoin, at least in the short run, murky at best.

Where Bitcoin once stood as an unlikely hedge, it now behaves like a risky silk road trader tangled with tech stocks, a place where the brave-and occasionally the foolish-conspire.

When the yields rise and uncertainty lingers like a cold draft, investors wave off the most volatile toys before they even think of the rest.

Trump’s pause relieves the immediate risk of escalation but does not snuff out the macro pressure blooming like a winter frost.

For cryptocurrency, the message rings clear: until the yields cool and liquidity finds its footing, Bitcoin is unlikely to rise in the near term and may wander downhill, or at least drift quietly like a forgotten hymn.

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2026-03-27 01:40