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Will Bitcoin repeat the 2021 ‘gasoline fractal’? THIS data says…
Bitcoin has held a relatively firm structure despite escalating geopolitical tensions involving the United States, Israel, the Gulf states, and Iran. The market has absorbed repeated shocks, yet Bitcoin continues to trade without a decisive breakdown.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin [BTC] hovered around $71,000, showing resilience under pressure.
This suggests that current macro headwinds have not impacted price action as severely as anticipated, particularly when compared to the sharp dislocation seen during the liquidation event on the 10th of October, 2025.
However, beneath this stability, a developing pattern signals potential weakness ahead.
Energy markets and Bitcoin: A resurfacing correlation
The ongoing conflict has significantly disrupted global energy markets. Concerns surrounding the Strait of Hormuz, alongside refinery outages, have driven gasoline prices higher and tightened supply conditions.
Amid this backdrop, a fractal pattern has emerged linking Bitcoin’s price action with gasoline market movements, echoing a structure last observed in 2021.
This relationship is reflected in the Bitcoin–RBOB Gasoline Futures Continuous Contract (NYMEX: RB1!), which tracks Bitcoin against the nearest expiring gasoline futures contract. Current chart behavior shows a notable alignment between both assets.
Source: Alphractal
Bitcoin appears to have rejected a key resistance trendline, formed a lower high, and entered a downward trajectory, closely mirroring its 2021 setup.
During that cycle, the pattern unfolded gradually before reaching a definitive bottom. A similar path may now be forming.
With no confirmed price floor in place, current conditions suggest Bitcoin could extend its decline before establishing a base, potentially setting up the next long-term rally phase.
Liquidity contraction signals caution
Global M2 supply remains a critical indicator for assessing market direction and identifying potential bottoms.
As a measure of total liquid money across major economies, M2 reflects the capital available for deployment into financial assets, including Bitcoin.
Recent data shows a sharp contraction of $470 billion in global M2 within a single week. This decline points to tightening liquidity conditions and reduced capacity for capital rotation into risk assets in the near term.
Source: CoinGlass
At the same time, traditional safe-haven assets are failing to attract sustained inflows. Instead, capital appears to be moving into select fiat positions and highly liquid instruments, indicating a defensive market stance.
Gold underscores this shift. The asset has posted its first bearish monthly performance since December 2024, declining 19% in March and erasing gains recorded in January and February 2026.
This correction represents a $6.6 trillion loss in market value over three months, a scale that highlights the extent of capital withdrawal across global markets and amounts to roughly 4.6 times Bitcoin’s current market capitalization.
Stablecoins point to sidelined capital
Stablecoin supply trends suggest that investors are not exiting the market entirely but repositioning.
Data from DeFiLlama shows that total stablecoin supply has reached a new all-time high of $316.9 billion. This rise signals a shift toward capital preservation rather than risk exposure.
Investors are increasingly holding stablecoins to shield against volatility while maintaining readiness to re-enter the market. This positioning reflects expectations of future opportunities rather than a loss of conviction.
However, as long as geopolitical tensions persist, capital is likely to remain concentrated in stable assets. This limits rotation into Bitcoin and may continue to weigh on price stability in the short term.
Final Summary