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Bullish momentum gathers steam: will a diplomatic thaw between Iran and the US propel BTC to a six-figure milestone?

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Bullish momentum gathers steam: will a diplomatic thaw between Iran and the US propel BTC to a six-figure milestone?

A credible Iran–US peace memorandum that ends the current war and reopens the Strait of Hormuz would likely bleed some “war hedge” premium out of Bitcoin in the short term, while strengthening the longer term case for $BTC as states quietly diversify away from the dollar in a more multipolar Gulf.

Axios reports that US and Iranian negotiators are closing in on a one page memorandum that would end the current war, per Axios, reopen the Strait of Hormuz to normal shipping, and launch thirty to sixty days of talks on nuclear limits and phased sanctions relief.

Reuters says Tehran is reviewing a US proposal under which it would cap uranium enrichment at lower levels and accept tighter inspections, while Washington would gradually ease oil and banking sanctions and allow access to parts of roughly $10 billion to $20 billion of frozen assets.

🚨 JUST IN: Iran deal 95% done – final stretch takes days. – War ends– Strait of Hormuz reopens toll-free– Nuclear material addressedIran gets frozen assets + sanction waivers. If they deliver. – Fox News pic.twitter.com/YU11x3q4jk

— Bitcoin Archive (@BitcoinArchive) May 25, 2026

How could an Iran peace MOU move Bitcoin in the near term?

Reporting on the economic fallout of the war notes that fears of a prolonged Hormuz disruption had added a double digit percentage “war premium” to Brent, pushing prices well above $100 and stoking stagflation worries before headlines about talks pulled crude back toward double digits.

When tail risk in energy and shipping recedes, traditional “fear hedges” like gold and, to a lesser degree, Bitcoin tend to give back some gains as capital rotates into high beta equities and credit, especially if lower oil also takes pressure off bond yields and central bank tightening.

Crypto media has already framed the Iran peace trade as a volatility catalyst: one widely circulated analysis notes that a failed April ceasefire attempt contributed to sharp swings across $BTC and altcoins, and that a durable deal would likely compress implied volatility as traders unwind wartime hedges.

If Donald Trump then signs and sells the MOU as proof that “peace through strength” worked, the first order move is classic relief rally behavior where Bitcoin trades more like a high beta risk asset than a pure geopolitical hedge, meaning it may underperform the parts of the market that benefited directly from lower oil and credit spreads.

How does sanctions relief and a new Gulf order change Bitcoin’s longer term bid?

The more interesting impact is structural rather than tactical.

Investigations into Iran’s war economy have highlighted the regime’s use of crypto rails for sanctions evasion, with reports of state linked networks using Bitcoin and other coins to facilitate oil sales and move value outside the US controlled banking system.

A peace framework that unfreezes assets and relaxes oil sanctions, as described by Axios, Iran International and Arab News, reduces the immediate need for those shadow channels, which is superficially bearish for “Iran demand” but misses the bigger point about sovereign hedging behavior.

Once Iran is partially readmitted to the formal system, its leadership will be intensely aware that sanctions could snap back in any future confrontation, and that awareness usually drives diversification of reserves away from pure dollar exposure into gold, other currencies and increasingly digital assets such as Bitcoin and dollar stablecoins.

At the same time, any deal that reopens Hormuz while cementing a more multipolar Gulf order accelerates quiet experiments in non dollar oil settlement between Iran, China, Russia and their partners, and that dynamic is exactly where neutral settlement rails and crypto based instruments start to look attractive at the margins.

Analysts tracking the economic impact of the war already emphasize that the core shift is from a unipolar US security umbrella to a contested regional architecture, and in that world demand for censorship resistant, seizure resistant assets and rails tends to rise over five to ten year horizons even if near term war premia fade.

So a signed Iran peace MOU probably takes some air out of Bitcoin’s crisis hedge trade in the weeks after the announcement, but it also nudges the system toward a more fragmented, sanctions weaponized order in which states are more likely to hold, use and build around Bitcoin and crypto infrastructure as part of their long term insurance portfolio.

Bullish momentum gathers steam: will a diplomatic thaw between Iran and the US propel BTC to a six-figure milestone?