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I've been observing something for a while that most in crypto aren't paying close attention to: how the Treasury bond market is literally shaping the course of geopolitical conflicts and, more importantly for us, Bitcoin movements.
Since the escalation of the Iran situation a few months ago, U.S. bond yields have skyrocketed. We're talking about sharp increases that reflect something deeper: the market is starting to question the true cost of financing American debt in turbulent times.
Here's where it gets interesting. According to analyses from institutions like ING, there's a critical level that no one mentions: the 10-year bond swap spread. When this indicator exceeds 60 basis points, it begins to exert real pressure on government finances. It's currently just below 50, but if it spikes, it would be enough to force the administration to reconsider escalation. Why? Because it increases the cost of borrowing for an already heavily indebted government. It's a cascade effect: more expensive borrowing, tougher credit conditions, widespread risk aversion.
Now, the other level to watch is the yield on the 10-year bond itself. We're close to the 4.5%-4.6% range, which was a line in the sand not long ago. When it surpassed 4.50% in April, Trump started hinting at pauses in tariffs. If it breaks 4.6% and heads toward 5%, analysts warn of a mini financial crisis that would force the Fed to intervene with liquidity injections.
And this is where Bitcoin comes in. If the bond hits those extreme levels, BTC will probably fall first by reflex. But here’s the play: the Fed’s liquidity injections would quickly reactivate buyers. It’s a pattern we’ve already seen.
The key is that the bond market is the thermometer of everything. It controls borrowing costs across the economy, influences risk-taking in stocks and crypto. The 10-year yield is at $72.82K for BTC in terms of pressure, and every move counts.
My conclusion: Bitcoin traders need to stop obsessing only over on-chain analysis and start monitoring Treasury yields and swap spreads. These "boring" markets could define your next price move. The bond war is the war that really matters now.