Bitcoin Didn’t Care about the Oil Market Recovery, 5-Years of Data Shows Why
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Brent crude just logged its steepest weekly drop in months, yet the Bitcoin (BTC) price barely budged. For the record, Brent is down 9% week-on-week against BTC’s 1%. That split is testing the oil and Bitcoin link many traders and market experts treat as a rule.
Several market participants read falling oil as a green light for a Bitcoin rebound. The real story runs through inflation, market positioning, and the network’s own miners, and it points somewhere unexpected.
Why Traders Tie Bitcoin’s Bottom to Falling Oil
Brent crude, the global oil benchmark, slid below $80 this week, down about 9%. WTI crude, the US benchmark, fell with it toward the mid-$70s.
The US-Iran deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz drove crude sharply lower.
Ignoring the US defeat to Iran for a moment – there is a silver lining..The price of Brent oil plummeted to $77 and almost reached the level before the start of the US-Iran warThen oil cost $67. Earlier, Siluanov stated that the situation in the Strait of Hormuz could bring… pic.twitter.com/OIfIPKo882
— Beefeater (@Beefeater_Fella) June 18, 2026
A view circulating among traders holds that whenever oil collapses, Bitcoin carves a macro bottom soon after. Some expect oil to climb again later this year on renewed Iran-Israel tension and a probable Hormuz toll. That rebound, they argue, would force one final Bitcoin flush that marks the low.
$BTC Very interesting pattern.Every single time OIL nukes, $BTC ends up forming a macro bottom shortly after.Right now, OIL is falling off a cliff while BTC is sitting roughly 52% below its highs.If the historical relationship continues to hold, it would suggest that at… pic.twitter.com/7AXgz6Abwf
— Killa (@KillaXBT) June 18, 2026
Meanwhile, that risk is not imaginary. Iran just suspended its 60-day talks with the US, which could lift crude again. Yet one price relationship rarely tells the full story, and five years of data barely back the Bitcoin oil link.
Five Years of Data Show the Bitcoin Oil Link Barely Exists
Over five years, the Bitcoin oil correlation with crude sits at just 0.036. Correlation runs from +1, where assets move in lockstep, to −1, where they move opposite. At 0.036, oil and Bitcoin show no reliable link.
Still, one average number can mislead. It is often suspected that the link only appears when oil turns turbulent. So we split the history into two groups, calm oil markets and wildly swinging ones. If oil and Bitcoin behaved differently in each, a single figure would blur it.
Even split, both readings come back near zero. The correlation is −0.02 when oil swings hard and +0.05 when it stays calm. Both sit close to zero, so neither setting shows a true link.
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The latest 30-day reading is −0.21. That means oil and Bitcoin have drifted slightly opposite lately (agreed), but only weakly. In short, no market condition makes oil a reliable driver of Bitcoin.
The chain from oil to Bitcoin is also partly broken. Oil moves breakeven inflation, the market’s gauge of expected price growth, at a moderate 0.41. However, that inflation signal barely reaches real yields, which are bond returns after inflation. Those yields tie only weakly to Bitcoin. Therefore, the Bitcoin-Oil link loses its steam while traveling from the first point to the last.
Instead, the more direct pressure now comes from the Fed. New Chair Kevin Warsh held rates on June 17, and nine of 18 officials projected a 2026 hike.
SUMMARY OF FED DECISION (6/17/2026):1. Fed leaves rates unchanged for the 4th straight meeting2. 9 out of 18 officials expect at least one rate hike this year3. Fed lowers its median 2026 US GDP projection from 2.4% to 2.2%4. Fed now sees PCE inflation not returning to…
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) June 17, 2026
Therefore, rate policy reaches Bitcoin faster than crude does. If oil is not steering Bitcoin, the next question is what is, and the charts point to behavior.
When Oil Spiked, Bitcoin’s Strongest Hands Held
History makes the point. When Brent hit a cycle high near $119 in late March, Bitcoin held steady instead of breaking down.
Long-term holders, the wallets that keep coins for many months (over 155 days), kept adding through that stretch. Their net position stayed positive into June, a clear shift from the heavy selling of late 2025. That pattern suggests the most patient owners were not rattled by costly oil.
The one genuine oil-Bitcoin link runs through mining. Energy is the main input to producing Bitcoin, so sustained high oil can squeeze miners’ margins. Yet the Bitcoin hash rate, the total computing power securing the network, has been rising recently even as WTI falls. Rising hash rate into cheaper energy points to miner conviction, not capitulation.
What’s interesting is that the hash rate remained steady even when the oil prices surged in March.
With holders and miners steady, the pressure is coming from a different place, the derivatives market.
What Is Really Pressuring Bitcoin Right Now
The pressure shows up in derivatives. Bitcoin open interest, the total value of active futures contracts, has climbed since June 11. It rose from $21.83 billion to about $23.45 billion. Over the same days, the Bitcoin funding rate flipped from roughly +0.0023% to about −0.002%.
Funding is the regular payment swapped between long and short traders. A negative reading means shorts now pay longs, a bearish tilt. More contracts plus negative funding suggests traders are building short bets, not going long on the oil-driven dip.
The logic matters. If cheaper oil were directly bullish, positioning would lean long. Instead it leans short. That setup could spark a short squeeze. In a squeeze, a small bounce forces shorts to buy back and cover, which speeds up gains.
Here is the trap. If that squeeze fires, many will again credit falling oil for the lift. But the bounce would come from shorts covering, not from crude. The underlying sentiment stays negative, so any push would be mechanical, not a clean oil signal.
For now, the Bitcoin oil link is too weak to drive the tape. Brent trades near $79, down about 9% on the week. Bitcoin sits near $62,800, roughly half its October record near $126,200, yet down just 1% over the same stretch. The next real move likely hinges on funding and the Fed, not the oil price.
If shorts capitulate, a squeeze could lift Bitcoin fast. If the Fed stays hawkish, the pressure holds, with or without oil. Oil still shapes inflation and the Fed’s path. But the Bitcoin oil link loses steam at each stage of that chain, fading before it reaches price.
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