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Ukraine disrupts Trump's oil stabilization plan, Bitcoin macro risk soars
Golden Finance reports that on March 27, Ukraine derailed President Trump’s efforts to stabilize the oil market during the Iran conflict, amplifying risks to global financial markets, including those tied to cryptocurrencies. Over the past month, the market has been consistently overshadowed by a single concern: the Iran conflict. Disruptions to shipments through the Strait of Hormuz—the world’s key chokepoint for oil transport—have driven oil prices sharply higher, intensifying fears about sticky inflation, rising risk-aversion sentiment, and the Federal Reserve resorting to further rate hikes.
To ease the situation, the Trump administration quickly lifted short-term sanctions on Russian crude oil, releasing supply to make up for the oil supply gap caused by the Iran conflict. This was originally a prudent plan to stabilize energy markets, but Ukraine completely derailed it. This week, Ukraine launched drone attacks on Russian ports and refineries in the Leningrad Oblast, and some observers say this is the “most severe threat” to Russia’s oil exports since Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
The attacks caused massive damage, with about 40% of Russia’s oil export production capacity brought to a standstill. Oilprice.com editor Michael Kearns said that this “first is a logistics problem, and only then a supply problem,” highlighting that the difficulty of moving oil to buyers is now roughly on par with the difficulty of producing oil.