Renewed tensions involving Iran, Israel, and the United States have reignited anxiety across financial markets—especially in crypto circles. On social media platform X, traders are warning that Tehran could attempt to disrupt traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for global energy supply.
The fear is that any interference could send oil prices sharply higher, push inflation back up, and rattle risk assets ranging from equities to digital currencies. Still, several analysts argue these concerns are running ahead of reality.
Weekend strikes rattle crypto first
Over the weekend, Israeli and U.S. forces reportedly carried out air operations targeting Iranian nuclear and missile infrastructure following stalled diplomacy. Iran responded with missile launches toward Israel and U.S. military positions in the region, intensifying speculation that the conflict could widen.
With traditional markets closed, crypto became the primary outlet for investor nerves. Bitcoin briefly slid from the mid-$65,000 range toward $63,000 before bouncing, while oil-linked perpetual contracts on Hyperliquid climbed more than 5%.

Why Hormuz dominates the conversation
The Strait of Hormuz, just 21 miles across at its narrowest, handles roughly 20 million barrels of oil per day, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That’s close to one-fifth of global petroleum shipments.
Given Iran’s proximity, some traders worry the country could threaten shipping lanes as leverage. Posts on X have floated scenarios where oil prices surge toward $120–$150 per barrel, triggering a global inflation shock, strengthening the dollar, and pressuring emerging-market currencies.
Geopolitical analyst Velina Tchakarova noted that oil prices were already near six-month highs before the latest escalation, adding that Iran’s role within OPEC amplifies the perceived risk. Reports of some energy firms pausing transit through the strait have further fueled speculation.
Why a full shutdown is unlikely
Despite the noise, multiple energy and macro experts argue that a complete closure of the strait would be both impractical and counterproductive for Iran.
Economist and fund manager Daniel Lacalle of Tressis pointed out that Iran produces roughly 3.3 million barrels of oil per day but exports only about half of it to China.
Blocking Hormuz, he argued, would directly undermine Iran’s own revenue while inviting swift countermeasures. Other OPEC producers could compensate for lost supply, and the United States remains the world’s largest oil producer, limiting the duration of any price spike.
Geography also matters. While the strait lies between Iran and Oman, the deepest and most heavily used shipping lanes run primarily through Omani waters. That makes a unilateral Iranian blockade difficult to enforce.
Energy analyst Anas Alhajji has emphasized that the waterway has never been fully closed despite decades of regional conflict, noting its width, depth, and heavy international security presence.
What this means for crypto
Taken together, the probability of Iran successfully choking off global oil flows appears low. Any oil price spike driven by headlines may prove short-lived rather than structural.

That said, a broader regional war could still trigger a flight from risk, which would likely pressure cryptocurrencies alongside other volatile assets. In such a scenario, bitcoin could still test lower support levels even if the worst oil-supply fears never materialize.
In short, the geopolitical risks are real, but the most extreme energy-market scenarios dominating crypto social media may be more dramatic than realistic.
