Crypto opened Monday flat. Bitcoin traded near $59,700, down 0.3% on the day and 6.8% on the week, as a de-escalation in the U.S.-Iran conflict lifted equity futures but left digital assets unmoved, per CoinDesk data.
Ether edged up 0.3% to $1,572, Solana added 1.5%, while XRP and dogecoin continued to slide.
Axios reported Sunday that the U.S. and Iran agreed to fully halt strikes and meet this week in Qatar to resume talks over the Strait of Hormuz and a broader end to the conflict. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures gained 0.5% as of Monday, but crypto did not follow.
The non-reaction fits the pattern of the past two weeks. Bitcoin jumped on the peace deal signing June 19, then gave it back as the hawkish Fed and ETF outflows reasserted. Traders have now been burned by enough geopolitical relief rallies that the Qatar meeting registers as a maybe rather than a catalyst.
South Korea announced plans to double DRAM production capacity in the Seoul metro area over five years, with Samsung and SK Hynix committing 800 trillion won, about $518 billion, to build four new fabrication plants.
Asian tech hardware shares slid on the rotation, even as eight of eleven MSCI Asia Pacific subgroups gained. The same AI chip trade that whipsawed markets last week remains the dominant cross-asset current.
The test for crypto this week is whether the Iran talks in Qatar produce anything durable, and whether Thursday's PCE print softens enough to shift the Fed narrative. Both need to land to give bitcoin a reason to move.