Two forces pushed Bitcoin higher this week. The obvious one: a ceasefire eased geopolitical fears and sent risk assets rallying. The less obvious one: Iran just started using Bitcoin as a tool of statecraft.
The combination sent Bitcoin to $72,699 - up 5% in a single day.
The Ceasefire Rally
When geopolitical tension drops, investors become less fearful. Money flows out of defensive positions and back into assets like crypto and stocks.
Bitcoin's 5% jump is a textbook relief rally - the market pricing in reduced risk of further escalation. Less chaos equals less panic.
Iran's Crypto Toll Booth
The more interesting story is happening in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran is now demanding that tankers pay transit fees in cryptocurrency - roughly $1 per barrel of oil.
A fully loaded supertanker carrying 2 million barrels could face a $2 million charge.
Why crypto? Because international sanctions have cut Iran off from the dollar-based financial system. Bitcoin and other digital currencies let Iran collect payments and store wealth while bypassing traditional banking entirely.
Think of it like a highway toll booth that only accepts a currency the highway operator invented - except the "highway" is the world's most critical oil shipping lane.
At current traffic levels, the toll system could pull in up to $20 million per day from oil tankers alone. Include liquefied natural gas vessels and you're looking at $600-800 million monthly.
What to Watch
This is one of the most tangible real-world use cases for cryptocurrency to date - a major nation using it to work around the entire international financial system. Whether other sanctioned nations adopt similar systems could shape crypto's role in global trade for years.
