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European Investor 22 May 2026, 21:44
Bitcoin Stuck in No Man's Land as Geopolitics and Inflation Data Crowd Out Crypto Narrative

Bitcoin is trading near $77,200 on Friday, essentially unchanged for the week, in a session that captures the cryptocurrency's peculiar predicament in the current market environment — despite recent positive regulatory developments related to the Clarity Act, Bitcoin has shown little excitement, largely unchanged over the past 24 hours and for the week, as the current state of financial markets is best described as macro-geopolitics first, crypto second.

Today's Michigan data did Bitcoin no favors. One-year inflation expectations jumping to 4.8% and five-year expectations surging to 3.9% reinforce the higher-for-longer rate narrative that has been the single biggest headwind for risk assets, including crypto, since the Iran conflict began in late February. With the probability of a June rate cut sitting at just 2.6%, speculative capital has little incentive to rotate aggressively into Bitcoin when elevated Treasury yields offer a meaningful alternative return.

Oil has reclaimed control of the macro narrative, with every major asset class now reacting directly to geopolitical headlines. The Strait of Hormuz remains the central organizing fact of global markets — disrupting oil supply, driving inflation expectations higher, pushing bond yields up and compressing the appetite for non-yielding assets. Bitcoin, like gold, finds itself caught in that crossfire, though it is navigating the environment differently.

The structural backdrop is genuinely supportive. US spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in approximately $2.44 billion during April 2026, a peak so far this year, with BlackRock's IBIT and Fidelity's FBTC driving the bulk of inflows. ETFs are absorbing approximately 4,500 to 5,000 BTC daily against a mined supply of merely 450 BTC — a 10:1 ratio that would be powerfully price-supportive in isolation. That structural demand from institutional buyers is the reason Bitcoin has held above $75,000 even as the macro environment has remained deeply challenging.

The Clarity Act, passed recently, represents a genuine long-term positive for the asset class by providing the regulatory clarity that institutional investors have demanded before making larger allocations. Yet even that positive news has been absorbed without generating meaningful upside momentum — a sign of how completely the Iran conflict and its inflationary consequences have dominated investor attention.

Analysts have repeatedly emphasized that Bitcoin needs marked improvement in macro conditions before a sustained rally can take hold, with key support sitting at $75,000 and $74,300, while $82,000, $85,000 and ultimately $90,000 represent the hurdles on the upside.

The longer-term institutional outlook remains bullish. Financial Institutions continue to point to Bitcoin's growing role as a digital store of value and inflation hedge, with year-end targets ranging from $90,000 to well above $100,000 contingent on macro stabilization. The halving cycle dynamics, sustained ETF demand and improving regulatory environment all point in the same direction over a 12-month horizon.

For now though, Bitcoin is waiting for the same thing that gold, equities and bond markets are waiting for — a definitive resolution to the Iran conflict that allows oil prices to normalize, inflation expectations to fall back and the Fed to regain the flexibility to consider rate cuts. Until that moment arrives, Bitcoin will likely continue trading in its current compressed range, unloved in the short term but structurally well-supported beneath the surface.

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