Bitcoin’s latest weakness cannot be explained only by ETF outflows or a cooling of large-holder demand. There is another layer that has not been sufficiently priced into the discussion: Iran’s partial return to legal, dollar-linked oil settlement.

I would not call it the single cause of Bitcoin’s decline. It is better understood as one structural pressure inside a broader repricing. But it matters because it cuts to the heart of one of crypto’s most politically powerful narratives — that digital assets serve as a backdoor for countries pushed outside the dollar system.

On June 22, 2026, the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control issued Iran General License X, authorizing the production, delivery and sale of Iranian-origin crude oil, petrochemical products and petroleum products until August 21, 2026.

Reuters reported that the authorization also covers related services such as banking transactions, insurance and shipping, with payments allowed in US-dollar-denominated funds.

This should not be mistaken for a full lifting of Iran sanctions. It is temporary, narrow and tied to the present peace deal negotiations between Washington and Tehran. The political conditions may change quickly if those talks falter. Still, for markets, even a limited opening can change behavior.

Iranian oil is not a marginal story. The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimated in its June 2026 report that Iran exported about 1.576 million barrels per day of crude oil and condensate in 2025, generating roughly $48 billion in export revenue.

The same report pointed to the opacity surrounding Iranian oil flows: vessels turning off identification signals, ship-to-ship transfers and the relabelling of origin. That is the practical world in which alternative settlement systems gained relevance. It was never an abstract crypto thesis. It sat inside real energy trade, real compliance risk and real payment friction.

Crypto’s role in that environment has also been documented by US authorities. On June 2, the US Treasury sanctioned Nobitex, Iran’s largest digital-asset exchange, saying it handled more than 50% of Iran’s digital-asset inflows in 2025 and helped Iran’s central bank obtain hundreds of millions of dollars in stablecoins.

The same action named Wallex, Bitpin and Ramzinex, describing significant digital-asset flows and, in some cases, billions of dollars in transactions. Washington was not treating these platforms as ordinary exchanges. It was identifying them as part of the financial architecture used to move value around sanctions.

That is why the market implication is more subtle than the question of whether Iran literally buys or sells oil with Bitcoin. The first instruments affected are probably stablecoins, OTC brokers and informal cross-border payment routes.

Bitcoin is not the settlement tool for every barrel of oil. But Bitcoin is the flagship narrative asset of the crypto market. When the political case for sanctions-driven adoption weakens at the margin, Bitcoin does not escape the repricing.

The logic is simple: if a trader can settle Iranian oil through banks, shipping insurance and dollar-denominated payments under a legal authorization, the incentive to use crypto rails falls. Bitcoin carries price volatility. Stablecoins carry issuer, exchange and traceability risk.

OTC routes often come with discounts, compliance uncertainty and the danger of being mapped later by enforcement agencies. For a sanctioned trade, those costs may be acceptable. For a trade that can temporarily pass through the front door, they become much harder to justify.

This is happening just as Bitcoin’s own funding structure is under pressure. According to Galaxy Research, US spot Bitcoin ETFs saw 13 consecutive trading days of outflows from May 15 to June 3, with total redemptions of about $4.4 billion, or roughly 59,351 BTC.

CoinDesk and The Defiant reported the same figures. The market, therefore, is not reacting to a single Iran headline. Rather, it is digesting several disappointments at once: ETF demand is no longer behaving like a one-way absorption machine; large-holder buying is no longer enough to calm the market; and one part of the sanctions-driven crypto story has become less compelling.

Data source: Farside Investors  Image: Archduke United LPF

The IEA’s June report also pointed to a recovery in Middle Eastern export flows after the temporary US-Iran arrangement, with Strait of Hormuz-related flows rising from a May low of about 9.6 million barrels per day to around 12 million barrels per day.

When physical energy flows normalize, payment workarounds lose some of their urgency. That does not mean Bitcoin’s long-term value disappears. It does mean that one of the market’s favorite geopolitical arguments has to be marked down.

For years, crypto bulls have argued that sanctions, war and dollar restrictions would push states and traders toward digital assets. That argument is not dead. Russia, Iran and parts of the gray commodity world will still look for alternative rails whenever formal finance is blocked.

But the Iran case shows the other side of the same trade. When Washington opens even a narrow legal channel, the need for the workaround immediately becomes less obvious.

When the gray world is handed a front-door key, the back door starts to look less essential. The license is temporary and the order is unchanged — but markets are built on the margin, and at the margin, that key matters.

Jeffrey Sze is chairman of Habsburg Asia and GP of Archduke United LPF. He specializes in high-end art transactions and RWA-T operations, and secured a cryptocurrency exchange license in Switzerland in 2017.