Jordan’s military confirmed early Wednesday that its air defenses intercepted and destroyed three Iranian ballistic missiles, the latest in a pattern of attacks that has turned the kingdom into a frontline shield for US military assets in the region. No casualties or damage were reported, but the incident sent immediate tremors through global financial markets.
Bitcoin dropped to approximately $62,600 in the hours following the interception, while Brent crude climbed nearly 4%.
What happened and why it matters
The missiles were reportedly aimed at a US-linked air base in Jordan, part of the broader standoff between Washington and Tehran over control of and access to the Strait of Hormuz.
This wasn’t Jordan’s first rodeo in 2026. The kingdom intercepted 20 Iranian missiles in June alone, followed by another eight in early July. Wednesday’s intercepts bring the running total even higher and suggest a troubling cadence: Iran keeps firing, and Jordan keeps swatting them down.
Jordanian forces remain on high alert.
Markets react: oil up, Bitcoin down
Bitcoin’s slide to around $62,600 reflected a broader risk-off sentiment across digital assets.
Oil’s nearly 4% jump tells the other side of the story. Roughly a fifth of the world’s petroleum passes through the Strait of Hormuz daily. Any credible threat to that flow sends crude higher, which feeds into inflation expectations, which makes central banks less likely to cut rates, which pressures risk assets.
What investors should be watching
Jordan’s ability to maintain its high interception rate is critical. If a missile were to strike a US base or cause significant casualties, the escalation ladder would jump several rungs at once.
During previous geopolitical flare-ups in 2024 and 2025, Bitcoin initially sold off before recovering as tensions de-escalated.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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