Bitcoin failed to reclaim $70,000 for the third time since February’s crash, pulling back to $67,600 during Wednesday’s Asian session as geopolitical pressure from the Middle East continued to weigh on risk assets globally.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
Bitcoin was trading at $67,612 as of Wednesday morning in Asia, down 0.7% over 24 hours. It is still up 3.4% on the week, holding some of its post-weekend recovery.
Ether dropped 2.2% to $1,957, giving back part of its recent bounce. It remains up 2.6% over seven days. BNB was an outlier, gaining 5.2% on the week to reach $629.
Altcoins took the hardest hits. Dogecoin fell 2.9% in 24 hours and is down 3.9% on the week. Cardano lost 4.2% in a single day and 3.5% over seven days. Solana slipped 0.8% to $85.16 and remains the worst-performing major token on a weekly basis at -4.2%.
XRP held relatively steady, down just 1.3% to $1.35, with a modest 1.5% weekly gain.
Analysts at FxPro warned that if Bitcoin keeps failing at the top of its range, a drop to $63,000 becomes a realistic next move.
Wojciech Kaszycki, CSO of BTCS SA, described the recent price action as a “shock, flush, rebuild” pattern. He said the key signal to watch this week is whether ETF inflows remain steady, not the price bounce itself.
Asian equities were under heavy pressure. South Korean stocks posted their worst two-day decline since 2008. Tech stocks across the MSCI Asia Pacific index fell 4%, pulling Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea lower.
The Indian rupee dropped to a record low, tied to rising oil import costs. Gold moved higher, bringing silver along with it for the first time this week.
The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed following weekend strikes. Brent crude jumped 4.7% on Wednesday despite the US announcing plans to escort tankers through the strait.
President Trump floated an insurance plan for oil tankers on Truth Social but gave no specifics. Higher energy prices feed into inflation expectations, pushing rate cuts further out.
US stock futures slipped Tuesday night. Contracts on the S&P 500 fell 0.5%, Nasdaq 100 futures declined 0.7%, and Dow futures edged up 0.4%.
E-Mini S&P 500 Mar 26 (ES=F)
The S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq all closed Tuesday down close to 1%, though they finished well above intraday lows.
Investors are now watching Wednesday’s ADP private payrolls report for clues on labor market health. Earnings reports from Broadcom, Costco, and Alibaba are also expected this week.
Bitget CEO Gracy Chen said the current drop in Bitcoin is partly driven by disappointment in the asset class, especially with gold, silver, and stock indices recently hitting new highs.
The post Daily Market Update: Bitcoin Struggles at $69K as Middle East Tensions Rattle Stocks and Crypto appeared first on CoinCentral.


