- Al Hadath reports US and Iranian technical delegations reached Pakistan on Friday, with Iran set to join negotiations on Saturday despite tensions over Lebanon.
- The talks come as the Strait of Hormuz crisis pushes oil toward $100, drives US inflation to 3.3% and complicates central bank plans to cut rates.
- Bitcoin is holding above $72,000 after recent liquidation clusters, leaving crypto highly sensitive to whether the Pakistan talks defuse or inflame the conflict.
An Iranian delegation will join US officials in Pakistan this weekend for confidential technical talks on the Middle East crisis, a development traders hope could ease war risks that have driven up oil prices, inflation and volatility across global markets, including crypto. According to Saudi‑owned broadcaster Al Hadath, citing Arab media sources, technical delegations from the United States and Iran arrived in Pakistan on Friday morning local time, with the Iranian team scheduled to participate in negotiations on Saturday despite having issued pointed comments about events in Lebanon.
US–Iran talks, oil risk and crypto’s macro backdrop
Details of the talks in Pakistan remain confidential, with neither Washington nor Tehran publicly confirming the agenda beyond broad references to regional de‑escalation. But the location and timing are notable. The Strait of Hormuz, just off Iran’s coast, handles roughly 20% of global oil flows, and research from the Council on Foreign Relations has long flagged it as a “maritime flash point” where even temporary disruptions can roil energy prices and investor sentiment far beyond the region.
In its latest analysis, energy data firm Kpler said the US–Iran confrontation over Hormuz is “reshaping global oil markets,” pointing to curtailed southern Iraqi production and pre‑emptive surges in Iranian exports as key dynamics that could push Brent toward or above $100 if traffic through the strait is restricted. That risk has already filtered into macro data. US headline inflation rose 3.3% year‑on‑year in March, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics reporting a 0.9% month‑on‑month CPI jump and Yahoo Finance highlighting that energy costs spiked around 10.9% in a single month, the sharpest rise in years.
Crypto has traded through that macro fog with a mix of stress and resilience. FXLeaders reports that Bitcoin has reclaimed the $72,000–$73,000 band in recent sessions, framing the move as investors turning to “limited financial assets” and “digital scarcity” even as recession and war fears linger. At the same time, a daily recap from exchange FameEX notes that the market has endured repeated liquidation clusters, including a recent 24‑hour stretch with about $342 million in liquidations, $250 million of them shorts, as traders were squeezed by a surprise bounce. Social feeds such as WatcherGuru have amplified earlier sell‑offs, pointing to days where more than $800 million in positions were wiped and hundreds of billions in crypto market cap vanished as oil and war headlines hit.
For traders, the arrival of US and Iranian technical delegations in Pakistan represents a potential hinge moment. A credible path to de‑escalation could cap oil, ease pressure on inflation and give risk assets more breathing room; failure or renewed confrontation would likely reinforce the very dynamics — higher energy prices, stickier CPI, and more violent liquidation cascades — that have kept crypto on a macro tightrope since the conflict intensified. As crypto.news has explored in earlier coverage of Bitcoin’s reaction to CPI data, the $280 billion stablecoin market and the rise of tokenised treasuries, the asset class is increasingly wired into the same macro plumbing as traditional finance — which means what is decided behind closed doors in Pakistan this weekend may matter as much for digital assets as for oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz.

