Bitcoin held in the low $63,000s on Tuesday after an overnight push above $64,400 faded — a round trip that left the token roughly flat on the day but up approximately 6% on the week. The recovery held despite Strategy's disclosure of its largest Bitcoin sale since abandoning its never-sell stance, which markets largely absorbed without breaking the bounce from last week's $58,000 low. But a fresh missile strike on a Qatari LNG carrier near the Omani coast as it left the Strait of Hormuz revived the oil risk that had battered crypto throughout the first half — and South Korea's KOSPI crashed 6.7% as Samsung slid 8.3% even on surging quarterly profits.The $64,400 Failure — What It Means TechnicallyBitcoin's overnight push to $64,400 — its highest level since before the June 17 FOMC hawkish pivot — failed to hold, with prices fading back to $63,170 by Tuesday's Asian session. The move above $64,000 represented Bitcoin's first meaningful probe of the resistance zone that CoinDesk analysts had identified as the first confirmation level above the 200-week SMA at $62,660. The failure to sustain above $64,400 is not a breakdown — Bitcoin is still up approximately 6% on the week and holding well above last week's $58,000 low — but it confirms that the recovery remains a bounce rather than a confirmed trend reversal, exactly as Ether's 11.6% weekly gain to $1,770, XRP at $1.13, and Solana near $80 suggest broad altcoin participation without decisive Bitcoin leadership.ARP Digital: CME Futures at 32-Month Low, Options Skew at Fourth-Highest on RecordThe most analytically significant element of Tuesday's session is the derivatives assessment from Yusuf Fakhro, partner at ARP Digital. CME futures open interest has fallen to a 32-month low — a reading that reflects the institutional exit from Bitcoin that has been documented in six consecutive weeks of ETF outflows and the record $4.06 billion in June redemptions. The term structure is at its tightest since early 2023. Together, these readings confirm that "the institutional bid has all but vanished," as Fakhro put it.The more contrarian element of his assessment is the six-month options skew — a measure of how much traders pay to protect against a drop — which has spiked to its fourth-highest reading on record. The only three higher readings occurred in June and November 2022, both of which came near major cycle bottoms. When downside insurance gets this expensive, Fakhro argues, the market is paying up for protection just as the worst may already be priced in. The parallelism with June and November 2022 fits precisely within the cluster of historical bottom signals that have been accumulating throughout the current correction — CryptoQuant's realized P&L ratio at a 43-month low, the Sharpe ratio at −20, the UTXO bottoming range, and now a six-month options skew that has only been exceeded three times in Bitcoin's history, all near confirmed cycle lows.The Fresh Hormuz Strike — The Macro Risk That Had Faded ReturnsBrent crude rose 0.6% to approximately $72.45 per barrel overnight after a laden liquefied natural gas carrier was struck by a projectile near the Omani coast as it left the Strait of Hormuz, according to Bloomberg. The fresh attack tests the late-June peace deal in a manner that directly echoes the pattern that has broken prior ceasefires — the US-Iran military exchange on June 27 after the Ever Lovely container ship was struck, which had followed the June 19 MOU signing by just eight days.Energy shocks tied to the Iran conflict drove much of crypto's first-half selling before the June truce eased them. A renewed flare-up — particularly one involving a Qatari carrier given Qatar's role as the diplomatic host for ongoing US-Iran peace talks — is precisely the kind of macro risk that had faded from the market's view as Citigroup projected Brent at $60 by year-end and the two-year inflation breakeven fell below 2%. If Hormuz tensions escalate from this incident, the oil price trajectory that Robin Brooks had identified as the mechanism for July 14's CPI to deliver a dovish surprise becomes less certain.KOSPI Crashes 6.7% Again — Samsung Down 8.3% Despite Profit SurgeSouth Korea's KOSPI fell 6.7% on Tuesday — its third severe single-session crash in two weeks, following the 10% crash and 6% drops of late June. Samsung Electronics slid 8.3% despite reporting quarterly profit that surged — a market reaction that reveals the extent to which AI chip demand valuation has decoupled from near-term earnings and is being priced entirely on forward AI spending expectations that investors are actively questioning. SK Hynix fell by a similar margin as it began marketing a US listing. US futures pointed lower following the KOSPI crash, suggesting Monday's Wall Street rebound may not carry into Tuesday's session.The crypto-equity decoupling that has been developing this week is notable in this context. For most of 2026, weakness in AI and chip stocks pulled crypto markets lower alongside equities — the KOSPI's 10% June crash preceded Bitcoin's test of $58,000. Tuesday's 6.7% KOSPI crash has so far produced a Bitcoin fade from $64,400 to $63,170 rather than a breakdown toward $60,000. Whether that independence is structural or temporary is the most important behavioral signal of the week.Whether the Bounce Becomes a Base — the Two VariablesThe question the market is working through in real time is whether the recovery from $58,000 becomes a durable base or fades back toward last week's lows. Two variables will determine the answer. Whether ETF inflows build from Thursday's $223 million single-day reversal into a sustained multi-session trend — the institutional re-engagement that has been absent for six consecutive weeks is the demand signal that converts accumulation into price recovery. And whether the renewed Hormuz oil risk fades as a one-off incident or escalates into a renewed conflict that closes the disinflationary oil channel that Citigroup, Robin Brooks, and every July 14 CPI bull thesis depends on.The macro backdrop that battered crypto in the first half has not fully cleared. The renewed Hormuz incident is the reminder.