All eyes on Bitcoin this weekend as Iran is already disputing the US narrative on the Hormuz deal

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Bitcoin rallied hard after Iran said it was reopening the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping.

Bitcoin hit the highest level since February, oil prices dropped, Wall Street notched another record, and the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield slipped to 4.24%. But here’s the catch: markets acted as if the reopening had solved the core standoff between Washington and Tehran.

Look closer, though, and the story gets more complicated. The opening is only temporary, the blockade is still in place, mine-clearing operations are ongoing, and there’s plenty of confusion about what Iran has actually agreed to.

Bitcoin, oil and SPY prices over the last 6 months

That matters even more heading into the weekend. U.S. stocks, Treasuries, and most major markets shut down after Friday, but Bitcoin keeps trading.

So once again, Bitcoin becomes the first big, liquid market to test whether Friday’s rally was built on real progress or just hope.

The public messaging from Washington also leaves room for a reversal. Trump told Axios he expects a deal “in a day or two”, and the same report said the outline under discussion could involve the U.S. releasing $20 billion in frozen Iranian funds in exchange for Tehran giving up its enriched uranium.

The Washington Post reported that Iran had not confirmed Trump’s claim that it would hand over what he calls “nuclear dust,” while also noting that earlier U.S. claims about Iranian commitments had already proved unreliable or had fallen apart.

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Apr 11, 2026 · Andjela Radmilac

The deal narrative is already under strain

Tehran’s public posture still sits well short of the version of events that calmed markets. In the Al Jazeera liveblog, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei was quoted as rejecting any transfer of enriched uranium to the United States and dismissing U.S. statements on Hormuz as contradictory.

Even before that, Tasnim reported on April 15 that Baghaei was still defending enrichment as a non-negotiable sovereign right.

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There’s still a big gap between what traders are hoping for and what’s actually been agreed to. Friday’s rally made sense as a relief move: an open Strait of Hormuz means less immediate risk for oil.

But it’s a stretch to say the big issues, like uranium, compensation, or the Lebanon ceasefire, are anywhere close to settled. That gap is hard to ignore. Trump said the American blockade on Iranian ships and ports will stay in place until Tehran reaches a deal with Washington, including on its nuclear program.

So while the Strait might be open for some ships, the bigger restrictions haven’t gone anywhere.

That’s the real setup as we head into the weekend. Oil finished lower, stocks hit new highs, and investors felt bolder, but the story behind those moves is still shaky.

We’ve seen optimism turn into doubt more than once during this conflict. The question now is whether this latest rally can actually last.

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Feb 22, 2026 · Liam ‘Akiba’ Wright

Shipping and oil have improved, but they have not normalized

The physical market is still flashing caution. Back on April 11, CENTCOM said U.S. forces were preparing for mine-clearing in the strait, with more equipment and underwater drones on the way.

If traders really thought the Strait was back to normal, they wouldn’t still be glued to live mine-clearing updates, with shipping firms still cautious of crossing.

The last ceasefire window showed just how slow the shipping recovery can be. Only five ships made it through on Wednesday and seven on Thursday, while more than 600 vessels, including 325 tankers, were still stuck in the Gulf. Daily passage was still just 10 to 15 ships, far below the 120 to 140 before the conflict.

Friday’s late reality check didn’t really change that picture. Kpler still saw ship movement limited to approval-based corridors on Friday evening, hours after the full reopening claims, and warned that getting back to normal could take months, not weeks.

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Maersk had already said in its own update that even with ceasefire news, there’s no guarantee of smooth sailing. Every transit decision is still a judgment call.

That’s why Friday’s oil drop made sense, but also why it’s fragile. U.S. crude closed at $82.59 and Brent at $90.38, a big turnaround from the stress earlier this month.

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