
Crypto trading joins wartime propaganda as “digital oil” called out amid volatile US-Iran ceasefire trading
Tehran is fighting a new price signal in public Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf chose a strange phrase for a dangerous moment. In the middle of a live crisis around the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s parliament speaker mocked...
Bitcoin 1 Minute
Kripto dünyasındaki son gelişmelere göre, Tehran is fighting a new price signal in public Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf chose a strange phrase for a dangerous moment. In the middle of a live crisis around the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s parliament speaker mocked “vibe-trading digital oil” and took a swipe at US Treasuries as well, turning a market argument into part of a wartime message campaign. The immediate surface read is easy enough.
A senior Iranian official wanted to ridicule speculative pricing and frame physical oil as the real thing. The deeper significance sits somewhere else. A state actor in the middle of a regional conflict is now speaking directly to the way risk is being priced on crypto-native rails.
Piyasa Dinamikleri
That shift deserves more attention than the phrasing itself. Oil has always carried military weight, inflation risk, and political leverage. What changed over the past several weeks is the venue through which some of that risk gets expressed first.
As documented in late March , the market for 24/7 oil exposure accelerated as geopolitical shocks kept landing outside the operating hours of traditional exchanges. The world does not pause on weekends, so traders increasingly want a venue that stays open when the old infrastructure is dark. The Iran angle carries more force than a generic crossover between geopolitics and crypto.
Tehran is no longer talking about crypto as a sanctions story, a payments workaround, or a symbolic side channel. It is reacting to a market function. When a public official in a war zone starts arguing about “digital oil,” the implication is that these synthetic and crypto-linked instruments have become visible enough to enter the information battle around price itself.
Piyasalara Etkisi
The timing carries extra significance because the Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world's most important chokepoints. The International Energy Agency says around 20 million barrels per day moved through the strait in 2025, about a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil trade. The US Energy Information Administration says flows through Hormuz accounted for more than one quarter of global seaborne oil trade and about one-fifth of oil and petroleum product consumption, alongside around one-fifth of global LNG trade.
Those numbers pull the issue out of crypto-native abstraction very quickly. A disruption there can bleed into fuel prices, shipping costs, inflation expectations, central-bank bets, and broader market stress. Ghalibaf has already been leaning into market language throughout this conflict.
Last week, after Washington tightened pressure around Hormuz, he warned that Americans would grow “nostalgic” for cheaper gasoline. also reported that Iran had floated Bitcoin-denominated payments for tanker passage, pulling BTC directly into a coercive chokepoint debate. Today’s attack on “digital oil” extends that pattern.
Kripto piyasaları, bu gelişmenin ardından yakından takip ediliyor. Yatırımcılar, söz konusu haberin fiyatlar üzerindeki olası etkilerini değerlendiriyor.




