In a recent note, CITIC Securities warned that the oil market may be underpricing near- and medium-term risks, with immediate consequences for cryptocurrency investors already worried about inflation pressures and tighter financial conditions amid the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
The note from China’s leading investment bank warned that weeks of enforced well shut-ins may cause irreversible damage to production capacity, while low US drilling levels mean the country cannot step in to compensate. Pricing power, in their view, has shifted to the Middle East.
Why Bitcoin and Ethereum investors should watch the oil market closely
With oil prices trading above $90 a barrel, the strain is clear in terms of consumer spending and inflation expectations. Should the scenario proposed by CITIC Securities hold, the headwinds to risk assets, including BTC and ETH will be exacerbated.
The bank is not alone in flagging underpriced risk. Tom Baker, managing director for Bahrain at commodity trading house Vitol, told the S&P Global Energy Middle East Petroleum and Gas Conference on June 2 that the oil market is underpricing risks from the Iran conflict.
Baker warned that refiners have deferred purchases hoping for a quick resolution, a strategy that breaks down once physical supply runs out. “The turning point could be when someone really needs those physical molecules and the physical molecules just aren’t there to buy,” Baker said.
The significance for crypto lies in the shared macro variables. Inflation expectations, bond yields, liquidity conditions, and Federal Reserve policy all drive the direction of digital assets, and oil price volatility is now pressing on each of them.
As reported by Reuters, Bitcoin fell nearly 18% in the week ending June 5, while Ether dropped almost 10% amid rising bond yields and reduced rate-cut expectations.
History has shown that when oil prices soar and trigger inflationary effects, crypto assets do not fare well. In 2022, while oil prices soared to $120 per barrel, the price of bitcoin fell below $20,000 as the Fed continued tightening. The factor behind this had less to do with soaring oil prices than with liquidity tightening.
As Cryptopolitan reported during the April ceasefire, oil has been the transmission mechanism from the Iran war to Bitcoin throughout the conflict, with crypto trading as a risk asset rather than a hedge whenever energy prices spike.
Global oil inventories are shrinking as supply risks intensify
The depletion of global oil reserves is alarming experts and industry players alike. According to Toril Bosoni, head of oil industry and markets at the International Energy Agency, inventories could hit critical levels before peak summer demand arrives. She added that even if a solution is found, reopening the Strait of Hormuz would take six to eight months.
US crude stockpiles, including the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, have fallen to around 1.5 billion barrels, the lowest since 2004, Reuters reported. Stocks at Cushing, Oklahoma, have dropped to 22.4 million barrels, nearing the 20 million minimum needed for efficient operation.
According to Goldman Sachs, 4 million to 5 million barrels per day of demand was lost in April alone due to the Hormuz disruption, pulling global output 4% to 5% below normal. China’s seaborne imports fell to 6.36 million barrels per day in May, the weakest level in nearly a decade.
Higher oil prices could trigger inflation and pressure crypto assets
The transmission channel runs through inflation and the central-bank response. Oil above $90 for an extended period limits the Federal Reserve’s room to lower rates, the move many crypto traders have been hoping for in 2026.
As reported by Reuters, Vanguard senior economist Adam Schickling said crude holding near $120 for a year would cost the US economy about 0.4 percentage points in growth.
Neil Chapman, Senior Vice President at Exxon Mobil, said in late May that Brent crude could hit $150-$160 per barrel due to a continued decline in inventory levels to record lows. Such an event could potentially serve as a macro shock to crypto like before.
Past oil shocks show the pattern. During the 2022 Russia-Ukraine supply shock, Brent rose above $120 but Bitcoin lost more than half its value that year after the Fed raised rates more sharply than in decades. In the 2026 Hormuz disruption, yields have risen, technology stocks have weakened, and crypto volatility has increased.
What this means for cryptocurrency investors is that an increase in oil prices does not necessarily imply that crypto will be negatively impacted. The effect of increased oil prices is tighter monetary conditions, a strengthening U.S. dollar, increased interest rates, and a reduction in appetite for risk.
Key oil and crypto market catalysts to watch next
CITIC Securities pointed out that forward oil curves are starting to reflect higher future prices, signaling market participants’ declining optimism regarding the speedy resolution of the Hormuz blockage situation.
For crypto, the next level to watch is whether Brent can sustain above $100 per barrel. Brent closed at $94.25 on June 8 after jumping more than 4% intraday above $97, driven by a fresh exchange of missile strikes between Iran and Israel that threatened President Trump’s proposed 60-day ceasefire before prices eased.
Any breakout above the psychological mark would likely lift inflation expectations and push back the monetary-policy easing that has supported risk assets this year. A meaningful de-escalation around Hormuz would likely relieve both oil and crypto.
For now, oil investors and crypto traders are pricing very different scenarios. CITIC Securities, Vitol, and the IEA all warn that physical supply conditions remain far tighter than futures prices imply. Whether they are right will soon determine whether crypto faces one final macro stress test in 2026.
cryptopolitan.com