Bitcoin (BTC) stayed near one-week lows on March 7 as a flight to safety among investors did crypto markets no favors.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed BTC/USD bouncing at around $37,600 overnight before tracking around $1,000 higher.
The pair had faced pressure into the weekly close, resulting in its lowest levels this month amid reports that Western sanctions against Russia could expand to include an oil embargo.
An already panicky atmosphere thus fueled performance by safe haven gold, which returned to $2,000 per ounce for the first time since August 2020 Monday.
Coming in step was the U.S. dollar, which surged against its peers to see the U.S. dollar currency index (DXY) target 100 in a near two-year record.
Other major world currencies, such as the euro, paid the price, with EUR/USD falling below $1.09 to hit lows similarly not seen since the aftermath of the March 2020 Covid crash.
"If Bitcoin was uncorrelated from the Stock Market it would be performing the way Gold has performed since December," analyst Matthew Hyland argued in a synopsis Sunday.
Such a "decoupling" was arguably more needed than at any time recently as stocks themselves faced a potential mixture of skyrocketing commodity prices and inflation-taming measures from governments.
Prior to the Wall Street open, S&P 500 futures were knocking on 2% declines, while Germany's DAX was already down nearly 4%.
The extent of Bitcoin's lackluster performance meanwhile even caught the attention of the traditional finance world.
Related: Rate hikes, CPI and war in Europe — 5 things to watch in Bitcoin this week
Lloyd Blankfein, former CEO of Goldman Sachs, queried why crypto more broadly was not seeing larger inflows against a background of
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