Bitcoin is trading near $62,172, down roughly 3.1% after a day that swung between an intraday high of $64,273 and a low of $61,794.

Now, three separate catalysts arrive within the next 24 hours: June CPI at 8:30 a.m. ET Tuesday, Fed Chair Kevin Warsh's semiannual testimony before Congress at 10:00 a.m. ET, and the start of US military enforcement of a blockade against Iranian shipping at 4:00 p.m. ET.

The July 14 blockade falls within the same trading day as the other two catalysts, and Bitcoin price could therefore open today's session reacting to backward-looking relief and close reacting to a forward-looking shock.

A timeline shows three Bitcoin catalysts on July 14: June CPI at 8:30 a.m., Warsh's testimony at 10 a.m., blockade enforcement at 4 p.m.

A disinflation print from an outdated market

Economists expect June's headline CPI to fall about 0.2% for the month, pulling annual inflation down to roughly 3.8% from May's 4.2%. They attribute much of that relief to gasoline prices that fell during the temporary US-Iran ceasefire in June.

Core inflation should remain near 2.8%-2.9% year over year.

That gasoline relief describes conditions that no longer apply, as oil settled over 9% higher on July 13, with Brent closing at $83.30 and WTI at $78.14 after news broke that the US blockade would intensify worries about shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

The headlines also made Treasury yields rise, and the dollar firmed alongside the move.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller set the stakes for July 13 data earlier, saying a near-term rate hike could become necessary if the next core inflation reading comes in hot.

Markets responded by pricing in roughly a 40% chance of a July hike, up from about 35% earlier in the day, with stronger odds of a hike by September.

Warsh testifies before the House Financial Services Committee just 90 minutes after the CPI release, and his response determines how the number is treated.

He can describe a softer headline print as real progress toward the Fed's target, or he can point to sticky core inflation, oil, tariffs, and inflation expectations that remain elevated, treating the relief as incomplete.

Catalyst Market is watching Bitcoin-positive read Bitcoin-negative read June CPI Headline CPI, core CPI, gasoline effect Headline falls and core undershoots 2.8%–2.9% consensus Headline relief is offset by sticky core inflation Warsh testimony Whether the Fed validates near-term hikes Warsh treats CPI as progress and avoids hawkish language Warsh emphasizes core inflation, oil, tariffs, or expectations Hormuz enforcement Whether the blockade stays limited Enforcement avoids broader shipping disruption Oil risk premium rises on confrontation or traffic disruption BTC range $64,273 high, $61,794 low, $60,000 level Reclaims Monday’s high after Warsh Breaks Monday’s low and exposes $60,000

The action in Hormuz targets Iranian-linked shipping and ports specifically, with US officials saying neutral traffic bound for non-Iranian destinations will not be restricted. Whether enforcement holds to that scope or spreads into broader disruption becomes the day's final variable.

A real recovery would need to reclaim the $64,273 intraday high once Warsh finishes speaking, and a $61,794 low that a decisive break would put back into play, with the psychological $60,000 level sitting just beneath it as the next liquidity test.

Two paths through Tuesday

In the case where the day holds together, core CPI comes in at or below the 2.8%-2.9% consensus, Warsh avoids validating a near-term hike, and blockade enforcement remains limited to Iranian-linked shipping without disrupting broader traffic.

Yields and the dollar ease back, Bitcoin reclaims ground above Monday's range, and the session's early relief survives contact with both the Fed and the blockade deadline.

In the case where the day breaks apart, a hot core print validates Waller's warning before Warsh even speaks, sending July hike odds higher and pulling yields and the dollar up with them.

Even a soft headline number struggles to hold up once Warsh discounts it, and the 4:00 p.m. deadline reintroduces the same oil risk the CPI print appeared to resolve. Monday's $61,794 low comes back into range, and $60,000 becomes the level traders start watching for real.

A flowchart contrasts two Bitcoin paths after CPI: reclaiming $64,273 if the day holds together, or retesting $61,794 and $60,000 if it breaks apart.

Today's session gives Bitcoin price three separate chances to move before the US close, each one only partial evidence on its own. The CPI print will report on a month that has already passed, and Warsh's testimony decides whether that report still carries weight with policy.

Oil settles the rest of it: the blockade decides whether it confirms or erases whatever the first two events produced.