Bitcoinist
April 3, 2026 11:30 PM UTC

US Moves Bitcoin During Iran Strikes — Market Watches Closely

The US government shifted seized Bitcoin on Monday just as military strikes on Iran sent crypto markets into a sharp sell-off. On-chain analytics platform Arkham Intelligence tracked three transfers totaling roughly 1.23 Bitcoin — about $22,550 — from a wallet labeled “Miguel Villanueva Seized Funds” to three separate wallets, receiving $2,500, $16,250, and $3,800 respectively. Small Transfers, Big Timing The amounts were modest. But small government crypto transfers like these often precede larger moves, and the timing drew immediate attention from traders already watching the markets closely. The US government currently holds around $23 billion in seized cryptocurrency, according to Arkham data. No official explanation was issued for the transfers. Bitcoin had already taken a hit when the transfers were recorded. American and Israeli forces launched strikes on Iran over the weekend, sending the price tumbling roughly 3% within hours to near $63,000 — though it has since recovered sharply, climbing to $71,000 as of press time. Gold and oil climbed. US equity futures pointed lower. Bitcoin behaved the way it usually does when fear takes over — it sold off alongside other risk assets. Markets Whipsaw On Khamenei News Then the situation shifted again. Iranian officials confirmed the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Bitcoin briefly spiked to $68,196 before reversing course and settling near $65,300 — still down about 2%. Iran fired back at the strikes, launching missiles toward Israel and hitting US military bases in Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain. Through all of it, Bitcoin held up better than US stock futures. Funding rates in Bitcoin’s futures markets turned sharply negative during the worst of the selling, a sign traders rushed to open short positions expecting further losses. If the conflict widens and oil prices surge, analysts say a deeper risk-off wave could follow. Iranian Citizens Rushed To Move Money On the ground in Iran, ordinary people responded immediately. Nobitex, the country’s largest crypto exchange, saw outflows jump 700% right after the strikes began. Crypto offered one of the few available channels to move money quickly across borders under sanctions. The convergence of events — a live military conflict, a government Bitcoin transfer, and a dramatic surge in Iranian crypto activity — landed on markets all at once. Whether the US transfers were routine or something larger is still unclear. Traders are watching the next wallet move just as closely as the next headline from the region. Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView

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