Global Markets Face Disruption Amid Energy, Interest Rate, and Geopolitical Tensions
On March 26, global markets are experiencing significant disruptions due to three concurrent developments. According to BlockBeats, the United States is easing E15 gasoline restrictions and accelerating the acquisition of oil and gold from Venezuela, aiming to suppress energy prices and regain supply chain dominance. Meanwhile, Japan's rising interest rate expectations and the global bond sell-off indicate a market shift towards repricing inflation and tightening policy paths. Additionally, tensions in the Middle East are escalating, with the U.S. increasing military presence and Iran responding firmly, heightening risks to energy transport and strait control.
This combination of energy price suppression, liquidity tightening, and geopolitical risk amplification is fundamentally altering the existing pricing framework. Energy is being politically manipulated, interest rate expectations are losing their easing outlook, and safe-haven assets like gold are being physically mobilized rather than merely traded. This shift signifies a movement of capital from financial assets to physical and strategic resources, marking a phase of global liquidity redistribution rather than expansion.
In the cryptocurrency market, Bitcoin is no longer the narrative leader but instead passively reflects whether capital is willing to take on risk. Current price movements are confined within the $69,000 to $72,000 range, with significant short positions and liquidation clusters forming resistance around $72,000, while liquidity support and long positions accumulate between $69,000 and $72,000, creating passive support. The overall structure is characterized by a "two-way confrontation," where price fluctuations are driven by liquidation rather than trends.
Until macroeconomic uncertainties are resolved, the market is unlikely to establish a unilateral pricing logic. Bitcoin is expected to remain compressed within liquidity-dense areas, with price movements driven by liquidation sweeps facilitating chip redistribution. The true directional choice will depend on whether there is a synchronized change in the three factors: energy spiraling out of control, confirmed interest rate tightening, and the Middle East shifting from "threat" to "actual blockade."