Crypto and energy markets are bracing for a possible Black Monday selloff. US-Iran negotiations in Switzerland collapsed over the weekend, reviving fears of an oil shock and a risk-off move into Monday.
Iran’s delegation walked out of the talks in protest over fresh threats from President Donald Trump. Based on this, analysts and traders alike anticipate stocks and crypto could open sharply lower.
Switzerland Walkout Revives Oil and Hormuz Fears
The breakdown came at the Bürgenstock resort in Switzerland. The US, Iran, Pakistan, and Qatar had met there to extend a June 17 truce.
Iran’s team refused a group photo and walked out, state media reported.
Trump had warned he would strike Iran again over its proxies in Lebanon. He also told Iranian officials they would not make it home if Tehran closed the Strait of Hormuz.
That threat carries weight because of the cargo. About 20 million barrels of oil cross the strait each day, near 20% of global consumption, the EIA reports.
Still, the waterway has stayed open through past standoffs. Iran threatened closures in 2011 and 2019 but never followed through.
Brent crude had eased to near $80 a barrel last week as crude oil slipped below the same threshold when tankers resumed transit. However, the walkout now clouds that fragile recovery.
When Trump declared a ceasefire earlier this month, stocks and oil reacted while crypto barely moved.
Bitcoin Holds Steady as Black Monday Calls Spread
So far, crypto has not played along. The Bitcoin (BTC) spot price held near $64,181 on Sunday, a touch higher on the day.
Ethereum (ETH) traded near $1,730. Because crypto runs around the clock, that weekend calm is a live signal, not a closed-market guess.
Crypto also has no brakes. US stocks halt automatically if the S&P 500 falls 7%, 13%, or 20% in a day. Those safeguards were built for exactly this kind of panic.
Crypto carries no such circuit breakers. A Monday slide there would run without a pause. Still, weekend sentiment soured.
“If there isn’t a massive Black Monday Crash tomorrow, I will delete my account,” one user remarked.
The phrase he borrowed carries history. On Black Monday in 1987, the Dow fell 22.6% in one session, still its worst day on record.
However, markets clawed back most of those losses within months.
Trader Ted Pillows made a similar case, calling the risk and reward of buying stocks now poor.
Even so, similar weekend warnings have misfired before, and this one could too, with Qatar and Pakistan are still mediating, and both sides have reasons to step back.
The risk is not hypothetical. Bitcoin has repeatedly sold off with risk assets rather than acting as a haven.
When Israel struck Iran this month, more than $1 billion in leveraged crypto bets were wiped out in a day. Analysts have since mapped a sharp Bitcoin drop if the war reignites.
Monday’s futures open will be the first real test. A return to fighting could trigger a broad risk-off move across crypto.
A quick path back to talks could calm nerves just as fast. For now, traders are watching oil, the strait, and the next signal from Tehran or Washington.
The post Bitcoin and Oil Markets Brace for Possible Black Monday After US-Iran Talks Fracture in Switzerland appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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