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Strait of Hormuz charges a crypto "toll," and short sellers get crushed: BTC rises 7% intraday, finally a real case of sanctions evasion story
Crypto Transit Tolls: Verified Real-World Cases Finally Surface for Sanctions Circumvention
After Polymarket broke the story that Iran pays a $1 per-barrel crypto transit fee for crude oil passing through the Strait of Hormuz, the market narrative quickly pivoted: BTC went from being an “asset that gets dragged down when war hits” to a “sanctions-circumvention tool tied to real use cases.” The ceasefire itself is still fragile (a two-week observation period, and Islamabad is still in talks), but Crypto Twitter and the crypto crowd already raced ahead to price it in. Top accounts are split into two camps: one shouting “this is crypto’s moment in the spotlight,” the other saying “pump it for the short term, then you still have to give it back.”
Elliptic traced that Iran previously bought roughly $500 million worth of USDT and actually used it, pushing the credibility of the whole story up by a notch. Tehran has been building crypto infrastructure for years, and it’s becoming more formalized over time. However, on-chain data doesn’t support the FOMO mood: MVRV is around 1.33 (close to a reasonable valuation), and NUPL is around 0.25 (sitting in the “hope” range)—no one is panicking to bottom-fish, and no one is fully lying flat and waiting.
This surge is short-squeeze-driven, not the start of real buy-side demand
Key conclusion: This is a short squeeze caused by the derivatives structure, not spot capital flooding in. BTC rose 7% to around $72,000, and at the same time about $284 million was liquidated, with 89% coming from shorts. The funding rate is still neutral to slightly negative (around -0.03%), meaning longs aren’t overheated; total open interest climbed to roughly $104 billion.
The technical picture also supports this read:
On sentiment, the Fear & Greed Index rebounded from extreme fear to 18, risk appetite has improved somewhat, but that doesn’t change the essence of “squeeze dominance.”
Some people argue: “If oil prices fall, inflation tops out; the Fed is about to turn dovish.” I think that’s overly optimistic. The probability of trouble on the energy front is still pretty high, and this week’s CPI could make the more hawkish expectations even stronger. The macro tailwind for crypto isn’t as strong as the bulls think.
How different types of capital see it—and what they do
Bulls: Treat it as ironclad proof of real adoption Both FT and Cointelegraph confirmed the detail of “a $1 per-barrel transit fee.” TRM Labs estimates Iran-related crypto fund flows at roughly $3.7 billion. These funds are actively going long BTC, and the $284 million in short liquidations becomes their profit. Their view is: if the narrative keeps going, there’s still about 20% upside room, but starting to trim around $75,000 is more rational.
Skeptics: Trade it as a short-term event The funding rate is neutral, ADX is weak, and QCP’s data shows put-option demand is picking up. This camp is using options hedges and de-leveraging to manage uncertainty. If talks collapse, I estimate there’s about a 40% chance of breaking support.
Macro integrators: Betting on de-dollarization via routing Combining TRM’s flow data with oil slipping to around $96, some funds shifted from going long energy to using crypto hedges. XRP rose about 4% that day, which looked “out of sync” with the Nikkei index. The bull logic of treating BTC as a “petrodollar substitute” makes sense, but I’m more inclined to pair long BTC with put options on oil to hedge.
Noise-ignoring cycle watchers: Look at the cycle, not the news Polymarket assigns roughly a 33% probability to the normalization of charging for Hormuz. Traders like this focus more on cycle positioning—NUPL is still in the “hope” rather than “exuberance” range—so they treat it as “re-pricing a long-term narrative,” not a short-term signal.
Underestimated risk: What happens if this gets “formalized”?
Iran using BTC/USDT to pay transit fees isn’t clickbait—it’s a pilot within the window period of “crypto settlement for global trade,” aligned with the same direction as shifts in flows like “petro-yuan.” Bloomberg also mentioned combination payments involving the yuan and crypto, validating that the “bypass to avoid the dollar” route is workable.
If the market only stares at price and ignores second-order effects, it could misjudge the risk: if this gets too high-profile, it may trigger tighter cross-border financial regulation, or repeated diplomatic friction, both of which could bring back panic. Chainalysis linked some related addresses to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. If transit fees become institutionalized and national participation increases, complexity and risk would rise in tandem.
From the chart location perspective, if upgrade risks heat up, the focus should be whether the $68,000 support can hold. Polymarket estimated about a 12% probability for the “North Korea-style script” scenario—not high, but it can’t be treated as if it never gets seen.
Bottom-line judgment and trading framework
It’s a bit early for the capital following the “geopolitical adoption” main thread to enter, but the direction can’t be called wrong. Currently, BTC valuation is close to reasonable, and the short squeeze has brought in momentum overflow—flexible capital has an edge over passive holdings.
In strategy terms, I’m inclined to:
Note: As sentiment swings back from “extreme fear” to “cautious hope,” the speed of the swing back could be just as fast.
Summary: Entering this narrative now is “slightly early,” and you have a first-mover advantage. The ones who truly “eat the meat” are agile traders and multi-strategy funds; long-term passive holders are relatively disadvantaged. If the ceasefire holds and CPI stays friendly, ride the trend to go long and trim on rallies. If talks break down or geopolitics flares up again, reduce leverage immediately and prioritize protecting principal.