Context
Bitcoin has outperformed several major asset classes since the onset of Operation Epic Fury on 28 February 2026, rising roughly 7% over that period while the S&P 500 and other benchmarks have faltered. The sequence of moves has prompted fresh debate over whether Bitcoin is operating as a digital safe haven or simply reflecting a post-crash rebound: Bitcoin entered the conflict already down approximately 45% from its October 2025 all-time high near $126,000, trading in the mid-$60,000s by late February (InvestingLive, Mar 26, 2026). Gold, typically the canonical crisis hedge, has declined by about 5% since 28 February and the MSCI World Index is roughly 4% lower over the same window, underscoring a divergence between traditional and crypto-oriented instruments.
Market microstructure and positioning matter when interpreting performance. The S&P 500’s technical picture worsened materially when it broke below its 200-day moving average for the first time in 214 sessions, a volatility signal that increases the likelihood of near-term tactical selling by systematic strategies and volatility-targeted funds (InvestingLive, Mar 26, 2026). At the same time, capital flows into spot and derivatives markets for Bitcoin have remained meaningful, with derivatives desks reporting elevated open interest relative to the drawdown period, suggesting greater trader conviction compared with the broader equity market in the early days of the conflict. The interaction between positioning, technical thresholds and macro catalysts—chiefly oil—creates a nuanced backdrop for pricing across risk assets in Q2.
Strategically, investors and allocators should distinguish between short-run repricing from a cleared panic and a genuine change in regime. A 7% move over three to four weeks is notable but modest relative to prior episodes where geopolitical shocks produced multi-month commodity rallies and larger shifts in cross-asset correlations. Historical precedent — for example, the 2011 Mideast supply scares and the 2022-23 energy-driven inflation episode — demonstrates that oil-driven inflation and liquidity shocks can, over quarters, re-rate risk premia across equities, fixed income and real assets. The immediate outperformance of Bitcoin is therefore a data point, not definitive evidence of a new structural role.
Data Deep Dive
The headline data points are crisp: Bitcoin +~7% since 28 February 2026; gold -~5%; MSCI World -~4%; S&P 500 breached its 200-DMA after 214 sessions (InvestingLive, Mar 26, 2026). Adding context, Bitcoin’s 45% drawdown from a $126,000 October 2025 peak to mid-$60,000s by late February implies that most of the large-scale deleveraging of speculative positions occurred prior to the geopolitical shock. That asymmetric timing means the post-conflict appreciation partly reflects a statistical rebound from oversold conditions rather than pure safe-haven rotation.
On market internals, equity breadth in the S&P 500 has contracted; the 200-DMA break historically correlates with elevated intra-month volatility and a higher incidence of sectoral dispersion. In contrast, crypto markets show concentrated flows: on-chain indicators (exchange inflows, realized volatility) and derivatives open interest suggest renewed speculative participation, although on-chain metrics remain below levels seen at the October 2025 peak. These contrasts are important — equities are reacting to macro and liquidity risks while Bitcoin’s short-term dynamics are more amplitude-driven by trader positioning and funding-rate mechanics.
Oil remains the pivotal variable for Q2 and beyond. The Strait of Hormuz, which accounts for a significant share of seaborne oil trade, is the flashpoint referenced by market participants, and disruptions there can transmit rapidly into Brent and WTI benchmarks. Even a contained spike in Brent to, for example, mid-90s per barrel (scenario-dependent) would likely prompt inflation expectations to rise, Fed repricing, and a risk-on/risk-off recalibration that could compress valuations across equities and lengthen credit spreads. The link between oil and cross-asset performance is not hypothetical; historical episodes show that a sustained commodity shock can turn a short-term crypto rally into a broader market repricing.
Sector Implications
Within cryptocurrencies, the present move favors liquid, large-cap tokens such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, which typically attract flows in risk-off-to-risk-neutral rotations. Smaller-cap tokens and speculative altcoins have shown mixed returns; their correlation to Bitcoin has increased but not synchronized, a pattern consistent with a market in which capital chases liquidity. Institutional access mechanisms — ETFs, custody solutions and regulated derivatives — continue to concentrate flows into Bitcoin products, amplifying its relative performance versus both gold and small-cap crypto assets.
For traditional hedges, gold’s roughly 5% decline since late February is instructive. Gold’s immediate reaction appears driven by dollar strength and a technical unwind in safe-haven positioning rather than a collapse in its inflation-hedge narrative. Year-on-year comparisons show gold underperforming inflation-sensitive benchmarks, and if oil-driven CPI pressures re-emerge, gold could reassert its inflation-hedge role — albeit with a lag as real rates and dollar liquidity adjust. Energy equities and commodity-linked sectors are naturally more sensitive to upside oil risk; within equities, energy and materials sectors would likely outperform cyclicals and growth names should oil sustain a significant rally.
Fixed income and FX desks are closely watching real rates and term premia. A crude-driven inflation scare typically forces central banks to delay easing or to front-load hikes, steepening policy uncertainty and potentially widening sovereign spreads in risk-off scenarios. FX markets tend to react with dollar strength during acute shocks, pressuring emerging market currencies and reshaping carry trades. These transmission channels underscore why oil is the common thread tying Bitcoin, equities and gold to macro policy outcomes.
Risk Assessment
The immediate risk is a re-intensification of Middle East hostilities that materially disrupts shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. A short, sharp disruption that is quickly contained is likely to produce a transient commodity spike and a rotation into traditional safety assets; a protracted supply shock would raise the probability of stagflation-style outcomes, challenging both equities and fixed income while creating ambiguous returns for crypto. Scenario planning should therefore focus on duration and market expectations rather than point forecasts of oil prices.
Liquidity risks are second-order but real. Systematic funds tied to moving-average-based risk controls (notably those responding to 200-DMA breaches) can exacerbate selling pressure in equities. In crypto, funding rate squeezes and exchange-level withdrawal frictions can manifest rapidly under stress. Counterparty and custody risk remain non-trivial for institutional participation in digital assets; regulatory interventions or material exchange outages would have outsized effects relative to spot price moves.
Model risk also matters: many pricing and allocation models assume stable cross-asset correlations. The present environment has shown correlation regimes can shift quickly; Bitcoin’s temporary decoupling from gold and equities is a reminder that models must account for regime change and path dependency. Stress tests that include commodity supply shocks, extended liquidity squeezes and policy reaction functions will provide a more robust view of potential outcomes in Q2.
Outlook
Over the next quarter, the most probable outcomes cluster around a volatility-rich environment where oil price trajectories decide cross-asset leadership. If shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remains unobstructed and oil prices normalize, equity technicals could stabilize and gold may recover lost ground, potentially compressing Bitcoin’s relative outperformance. Conversely, a sustained oil spike would likely re-price inflation expectations, raise real yields and produce heterogeneous outcomes: commodity-linked equities and energy names would outperform, while high-duration growth sectors and risk-sensitive assets could underperform.
Correlations will be dynamic. A repeat of the October 2025 pattern — where crypto led into a liquidity-driven unwind — is possible, but the interplay of institutional flows, ETF demand mechanics and macro policy reaction makes a simple repeat unlikely. Investors should expect episodic dislocations across asset classes, with Bitcoin’s short-term moves reflecting both positional rebounds and liquidity-driven flows rather than a clean transition to a permanent safe-haven status.
Tactical considerations hinge on horizon and liquidity needs. Market participants with short horizons will be sensitive to technical signals (200-DMA breaks, funding rates, on-chain flows), while longer-horizon allocators should monitor structural variables: energy supply risk, central-bank policy trajectory, and regulatory developments in crypto markets. In all scenarios, having a clear framework for scenario weighting will be more valuable than relying on point forecasts.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Our contrarian read is that Bitcoin’s recent outperformance is better characterized as a post-clearing bounce from an earlier speculative liquidation than as the emergence of a new, persistent safe-haven correlation. The 45% drawdown from the October 2025 peak to late February 2026 removed much of the convex speculative exposure; since then, a ~7% rebound reflects a combination of technical short-covering, return-seeking allocation into liquid crypto vehicles, and concentrated institutional product flows. This does not preclude Bitcoin playing a portfolio role in certain scenarios, but it cautions against interpreting short-run outperformance as regime change without corroborating macro and flow evidence.
We also highlight a non-obvious risk: the interaction between commodity-driven inflation and regulatory responses. A pronounced oil shock that re-accelerates inflation could prompt faster-than-expected tightening in policy rates in some regions. That reaction would compress equity multiples and force a reconsideration of risk premia across assets, including crypto. In other words, Bitcoin’s path in Q2 will be as much a function of policy and liquidity shifts as of crypto-native dynamics.
For institutional investors, the practical implication is to construct scenario-based allocations that explicitly quantify oil-disruption pathways and their impact on correlation assumptions. Fixed, naive allocations that assume historical correlations will produce tracking and governance risks in an environment where commodity shocks and geopolitical events can pivot cross-asset behaviour rapidly.
Bottom Line
Bitcoin’s ~7% gain since 28 February 2026 is notable but should be read against a prior 45% drawdown from the October 2025 peak; oil disruptions via the Strait of Hormuz remain the key determinant of Q2 cross-asset performance. Prepare allocations around scenario-driven outcomes rather than single-factor narratives.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: Could Bitcoin become a reliable safe haven if oil shocks continue? A: History shows safe-haven status is context-dependent. During prolonged commodity shocks, traditional hedges like gold and real assets often outperform until monetary policy re-prices; crypto’s role has been episodic and driven by liquidity and positioning. A sustained regime where Bitcoin acts as a reliable safe haven would require consistent behavioral shifts in institutional flows and regulatory clarity.
Q: What historical episodes are most comparable to the current configuration? A: Comparable episodes include the 2011 Middle East supply scares and the 2022-23 energy-driven inflation period. Both demonstrate that commodity shocks can re-rate inflation expectations and force central-bank responses that alter equity and fixed-income premia. The key difference today is the greater institutional presence in crypto and the availability of regulated Bitcoin products, which changes flow dynamics but not the fundamental transmission channels from oil to macro policy.
Q: How should risk models be adjusted for Q2? A: Managers should introduce path-dependent scenarios that combine (1) short-duration oil spikes, (2) prolonged supply disruptions, and (3) varying central-bank reactions. Stress tests should relax fixed-correlation assumptions and model liquidity thresholds (e.g., 200-DMA technical triggers, funding-rate squeezes, and exchange withdrawal stress) to capture asymmetric outcomes.
For further reading on macro and crypto cross-asset dynamics, see our pieces on [macro outlook](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [crypto insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
