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Bitcoin continued to fall on March 28, where it traded near 66, 2000, as markets reacted to growing doubts about the easing of tensions between the United States and the United States. President Donald Trump said that the period of the suspension of strikes on energy installations for a period of 1 year.
show feedback clearly in all markets.
The S&P 500 index fell gradually throughout the week, falling to its lowest level.
This broad wave of selling points to a clear shift towards a risk aversion policy that diverts investors from their stock holdings as geopolitical uncertainty rises.
The same pattern follows the currency market.
Bitcoin price movement shows continued weakness, as intraday bounces fail. That points to a deeper problem.
Market reports indicated that investors are not treating the current period of suspension as a step towards peace, but rather as a postponement of escalation. Reports of continued strikes have reinforced this view.
At the same time, rising US Treasury bond yields are causing tightening. The higher returns lead to lower liquidity and make capital more expensive, but it also places high-risk assets such as stocks and cryptocurrencies.
As a result, Bitcoin is traded like a technology stock rather than a trading tool.
During previous periods, geopolitical tensions sometimes supported Bitcoin. This is not the case now. Instead, the risk of inflation, the rise in oil prices, and the weakening of the expectation of falling interest rates affect the market’s attention.
The message remains clear at this time.
Until reliable progress is made towards easing and yields stabilize, the inflation markets will remain under pressure, and short-term downside risks will prevail.