Bitcoin just sat out one of the best macro setups crypto has seen in months. Oil hit a three-month low, bonds rallied, and a US-Iran deal landed on the table - but the money went somewhere else entirely.
Altcoins Led the Move
Uniswap's UNI token jumped 22.5% Wednesday to $3.53 after Standard Chartered started covering it with a $100 price target by 2030.
The bank's digital assets research head called the decentralized exchange - a crypto trading platform that runs on code instead of a company - "a foundational layer of the on-chain economy."
The $100 target sits roughly 28 times above UNI's current price, betting Uniswap captures a bigger share of crypto trading volume in the years ahead.
Other altcoins ran too - Hyperliquid's HYPE climbed 7.8% on the day and 34.3% on the week, while Solana ran 14.7% over the same stretch.
Ether joined the move, climbing 1.4% to $1,793 for a 10.4% weekly gain - with XRP the only major name in the red after slipping 0.9% to $1.22.
Bitcoin, meanwhile, sat at $65,800 - flat on the day, up 7.4% on the week, and going nowhere fast.
The range has held tight for weeks, even as money rotates across the rest of the crypto market - a sign traders are waiting on Wednesday's Fed meeting before committing fresh capital.
Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down where money is actually moving across markets - in five minutes, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Oil and Bonds Rally on Iran Deal Hopes
Brent crude fell below $79 a barrel, its lowest level in more than three months, after sliding 15% over four sessions - its longest losing run this year.
The reason: traders are betting the US-Iran deal lands and reopens the Strait of Hormuz.
The agreement would let Iran sell oil immediately and access a $300 billion development fund, with the US Treasury issuing waivers on Iranian crude and petrochemical exports once the memorandum is signed.
In exchange, Iran commits to never seeking a nuclear weapon - terms that would unleash a wave of new supply onto global markets.
Cheaper oil takes pressure off inflation, sending bonds higher as Australian and Japanese 10-year yields each slipped about five basis points (hundredths of a percentage point).
That's the kind of mix that usually lights a fire under risk assets - but bitcoin didn't move while altcoins did.
What To Watch
The Fed decides on rates Wednesday, and it's the first call under new Chairman Kevin Warsh, which makes his tone the real catalyst now.
Warsh's debut puts every word under a microscope, with traders parsing his outlook for clues on how aggressive future cuts could get.
Bitcoin has moved in lockstep with risk assets through the Iran swings, so cheaper oil gives Warsh cover to sound open to rate cuts.
If he does, bitcoin could finally pull off the $66,000 level it's been stuck under.
For now, the money in crypto is rotating - just not into bitcoin.
Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs for the daily read on crypto, stocks, and the macro picture - you also get a 45-minute investing course thrown in as a bonus.
