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How long will the impact of geopolitical conflicts last on the crypto market?

The typical time window during which geopolitical conflicts significantly affect the crypto market is usually within 1 to 3 weeks. The impact exhibits a "pulse-like" characteristic, meaning short-term shocks are intense but decay quickly, with long-term pricing power returning to macro fundamentals.

Three Stages of the Impact Cycle

We can clearly divide the impact cycle into three stages:

Intense Volatility Period (1-3 days): This is the highest risk phase. During the "black swan" moments of conflict outbreak or negotiation breakdown, the market rapidly prices in events based on panic and uncertainty, often resulting in sharp declines, high volatility, and liquidation of leveraged positions. Price swings are mainly driven by sentiment and stop-loss triggers.

Emotional Digestion and Consolidation Period (1-2 weeks): The market begins to recover from panic and starts assessing the actual severity and long-term effects of the conflict. Prices enter a wide-ranging consolidation phase. If the situation does not worsen further (e.g., escalate into full-scale war or blockade key waterways), risk aversion sentiment will start to fade, and prices will seek new equilibrium.

Narrative Shift Period (around 2 weeks later): Unless the conflict is severe enough to alter the global economic and monetary policy outlook (e.g., trigger an oil crisis leading to stagflation), approximately two weeks later, the market's focus will shift back to core narratives that determine long-term trends, such as Federal Reserve interest rate policies, macroeconomic data, and the crypto market’s supply-demand structure (like ETF fund flows, halving cycles, etc.). Geopolitical conflicts will recede into background noise.

Key Determinants: What Will Prolong the Impact?

The duration of the impact is not fixed and depends on the "severity" of the conflict:

Short-term Disruption: "Limited conflicts" (such as targeted airstrikes or small-scale clashes) typically cause only 1-2 weeks of volatility. In recent years, markets have become gradually desensitized to such events (e.g., multiple Middle East conflicts in 2024-2025).

Long-term Threats: Only if the conflict escalates into a "full crisis" capable of changing the global macro landscape will its impact extend for months. The key indicators are the security of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and sustained oil price surges. This could force the Fed to maintain high interest rates longer, continuously suppressing all risk assets, including cryptocurrencies.

Current (April 2026 US-Iran Crisis) Strategic Implications

In light of the current US-Iran negotiations deadlock, investors can follow this timeframe to manage risks:

Short-term (next 7-10 days): Be prepared for high volatility. Any sudden news around the deadline set by Trump (the evening of April 7) could trigger sharp swings. Reduce or eliminate leverage and avoid directional bets when news is uncertain.

Medium-term (1-month outlook): If the situation does not escalate into full-scale war, by mid to late April, market attention will shift back to economic data and central bank policies. At that point, the influence of geopolitical factors will significantly diminish.

Long-term (beyond one quarter): Bitcoin’s long-term trend will ultimately be determined by global liquidity cycles and its own adoption rate. Geopolitical conflicts may cause fluctuations on the chart but are unlikely to fundamentally alter the long-term bull or bear market structure on their own.

Summary: View the current geopolitical tensions as a stress test and a potential "golden buy" opportunity. Its main effect is to generate short-term panic and irrational sell-offs. For long-term investors, the key is not to be disturbed by short-term "pulses," stay clear-headed amid volatility, and prepare to accumulate core assets on dips when sentiment is extremely pessimistic.
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