Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Pre-IPOs
Unlock full access to global stock IPOs
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
#CrudeOilPriceRose
#原油价格上涨
Date: April 13, 2026
What is unfolding in the oil market right now is not a normal price rally it is a geopolitical supply shock layered with macro uncertainty. The Middle East situation has pushed crude oil into a phase where pricing is no longer guided by fundamentals alone, but by an expanding risk premium that reflects fear of disruption.
The evacuation of Oman’s export terminals, shutdown of Iraqi ports, and reported tanker attacks in the Gulf collectively signal a serious escalation in supply route vulnerability. In oil markets, this matters more than just barrels lost. Because once shipping security is questioned, the market starts pricing future uncertainty, not present conditions. That is why volatility increases even before actual shortages fully materialize.
The International Energy Agency’s release of 400 million barrels is a stabilizing attempt, but from a structural point of view, it only provides short-term liquidity relief. Strategic reserves are not designed to counter prolonged geopolitical instability. If tensions persist or escalate further, the market will quickly adjust and treat these reserves as temporary cushioning rather than real supply replacement.
At the core, the oil market is currently trapped between two opposing narratives:
Bullish narrative:
Ongoing geopolitical instability → sustained disruption risk → higher long-term oil pricing
Bearish narrative:
Diplomatic breakthrough (especially US–Iran negotiation progress) → rapid risk premium collapse → sharp correction in oil
From my perspective, the market is currently overpriced on uncertainty rather than certainty. This means volatility is not just expected—it is structurally embedded in the trend.
Macro Transmission — Why Oil Matters for Crypto
Many traders oversimplify the relationship between oil and crypto. The real connection is not direct—it works through macro liquidity, inflation expectations, and risk sentiment.
1. Inflation Channel (Primary Impact)
Rising oil prices increase global inflation expectations. When inflation expectations rise:
Central banks delay easing
Interest rates stay higher for longer
Liquidity remains constrained
And in crypto markets, tight liquidity directly reduces momentum. This is why even strong narratives struggle to break resistance during oil-driven inflation phases.
2. Risk Sentiment Compression
Oil spikes often signal global instability. That creates a risk-off environment, where:
Investors reduce exposure to volatile assets
Capital shifts toward safer stores (USD, bonds, gold)
Crypto becomes a high-beta asset class under pressure
But the reaction is not uniform.
3. Internal Rotation Inside Crypto
This is where market structure becomes important.
From what I’ve consistently observed:
Altcoins react first and decline faster
Bitcoin holds relatively better due to liquidity concentration
Large capital reduces leverage instead of exiting fully
So instead of a total market exit, what we see is a hierarchical contraction of risk.
Institutional Behavior — The Hidden Layer
Institutions are not reacting emotionally. They are adjusting exposure based on macro risk models.
In this environment:
Commodity exposure becomes more attractive (oil, gold)
Crypto exposure becomes more selective
Derivatives positioning shifts toward hedging rather than speculation
This is why we are not seeing panic liquidation—what we are seeing is controlled de-risking.
That distinction is very important. It tells us the market is under stress, but not in collapse mode.
Oil as a Global Liquidity Signal
Right now, oil is acting as a macro liquidity indicator. When oil rises sharply:
Inflation expectations increase
Real yields tighten
Risk assets lose momentum
So crypto is not reacting to oil directly—it is reacting to what oil signals about global financial conditions.
Geopolitical Sensitivity — The Dominant Variable
The most critical factor now is not technical or macro data—it is headline risk.
Markets are extremely sensitive to:
US–Iran negotiation outcomes
Shipping route security in the Gulf
Any escalation or de-escalation signals
This creates a binary structure:
Escalation → oil spikes → crypto pressure increases
De-escalation → oil stabilizes → crypto relief rally possible
This is why price action feels unstable—it is not trend-driven, it is event-driven.
Market Structure Interpretation
From a structural viewpoint:
Oil is in a volatility expansion phase
Crypto is in a macro compression phase
Correlation is increasing temporarily due to shared risk drivers
But long-term structure remains different:
Oil = supply shock driven cycle
Crypto = liquidity + adoption driven cycle
This means correlation is temporary, not permanent.
Personal Market Interpretation
From my experience observing similar cycles, this type of environment does one thing consistently:
It confuses directional conviction.
Traders try to force trend identification in a market that is actually being driven by external shocks. That is where most mistakes happen.
Right now:
The market is not trending cleanly
It is reacting, not leading
Liquidity is defensive, not aggressive
This is not a phase for prediction—it is a phase for observation and controlled positioning.
Final Insight
This is not simply an oil rally.
This is a global macro stress phase where energy markets are driving financial sentiment.
Crypto is absorbing the impact, but the underlying structure is not broken. It is adjusting to a new layer of geopolitical risk.
Key takeaway:
Short-term pressure is real and visible, but it is not structural damage. The system is in a transition phase where external forces dominate internal market signals.
In such environments, the real edge does not come from speed—it comes from understanding how macro shocks reshape capital behavior before the market stabilizes.