Trump says Iran negotiations proceeding ‘nicely,’ warns of stronger attack if no deal is reached

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President Donald Trump took to Truth Social on May 25 to declare that negotiations with Iran are moving in the right direction, framing the stakes in characteristically blunt terms: it would be a “Great Deal for all or, no Deal at all.”

The warning that followed was less diplomatic. Trump cautioned that failure to reach an agreement would trigger US military action “bigger and stronger than ever before.”

What’s on the table

The indirect talks reportedly center on a 14-point framework. That framework includes a ceasefire, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and an expansion of the Abraham Accords involving Gulf allies.

Iranian officials have signaled that no immediate agreement is on the horizon, with pushback on certain US narratives around the talks.

The US has intensified its sanctions posture on the digital asset front. Roughly $344 million in cryptocurrency tied to Iranian wallets has reportedly been frozen, underscoring how crypto enforcement has become a frontline tool in geopolitical standoffs.

How crypto markets are reading the room

Bitcoin reclaimed levels near $77,000 in recent sessions, a move that correlated with broader optimism around de-escalation in the Middle East.

Ether and other major cryptocurrencies have followed a similar pattern, rising and falling in loose correlation with equity and oil markets as Iran headlines dominate the news cycle. The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply, so any disruption to that chokepoint ripples through every asset class, crypto included.

On Polymarket, bets on the outcomes of US-Iran peace talks have exceeded $154 million in volume.

What this means for investors

The $344 million in frozen Iranian-linked crypto assets introduces uncertainty about how broadly enforcement nets might be cast. Exchanges operating in gray areas, or even legitimate platforms with exposure to wallets that have touched sanctioned funds through intermediary transactions, could face increased scrutiny.

The 14-point framework, if it holds together, could provide a sustained tailwind for risk assets broadly, including crypto. A ceasefire and reopened Strait of Hormuz would ease oil market anxiety, reduce inflation expectations, and free up central banks to maintain or loosen monetary policy.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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