Latest News 12-04-2026 10:15 2 Views

BREAKING: Bitcoin Drops Below $72,000 as Ethereum and XRP Slide After JD Vance Confirms Iran Deal Failure

The post BREAKING: Bitcoin Drops Below $72,000 as Ethereum and XRP Slide After JD Vance Confirms Iran Deal Failure appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Crypto markets slipped on Friday after Vice President JD Vance confirmed that direct US-Iran negotiations in Pakistan ended without an agreement, reviving fears of continued conflict and uncertainty in global markets.

Bitcoin dropped below $72,000, trading around $71,503 at time of writing, down 1.82% in 24 hours. Ethereum fell to $2,211, while XRP slipped to $1.32. The total crypto market cap sits at $2.43 trillion, down 1.54% on the day.

What Happened in Islamabad

The talks represented a historic moment. It was the first direct face-to-face meeting between US and Iranian officials since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. They lasted 21 hours and produced nothing.

The negotiations collapsed on two core issues. Iran refused to give up uranium enrichment and refused to relinquish control of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran also arrived with four conditions of its own: full sovereignty over the Strait, complete war reparations, unconditional release of frozen assets and a regional ceasefire including Lebanon.

The US came in asking for free passage through Hormuz and a commitment that Iran would never build a nuclear weapon.

The two sides never found common ground.

Vance was direct after leaving Islamabad. “Iran has chosen not to accept our terms. That is bad news for Iran much more than it is for the United States,” he said, adding that the US had left its final and best offer on the table.

Why Markets Reacted

The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 20% of global oil trade. A prolonged standoff keeping it closed adds sustained pressure to energy prices, inflation expectations and global growth forecasts. All three are headwinds for risk assets including crypto.

The Fear and Greed Index sits at 45, in neutral territory, suggesting markets have not yet fully priced in a worst-case scenario but are clearly not comfortable either. 

What Comes Next

With diplomatic talks now officially off the table and the US calling its last offer final, the path toward a negotiated resolution has narrowed significantly. Markets will now watch for whether military escalation resumes, whether a new diplomatic channel opens or whether a third party steps in to mediate.


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