Bitcoin (BTC) fell to $86,000 on Sunday as global markets turned defensive, even while the U.S. dollar weakened on fears of currency intervention and bond market stress in Japan. The move has challenged the common view that a falling dollar automatically lifts Bitcoin, with capital instead flowing into gold and silver.
The split matters because it shows where investors are seeking protection during the current bout of uncertainty and why BTC is trading more like a risk asset than a hedge as confidence in fiat currencies wavers.
Market observers note that the dollar’s recent decline has not propelled Bitcoin higher. Instead, capital has flowed decisively into traditional safe havens.
In a January 26 analysis, CryptoQuant contributor GugaOnChain argued that dollar weakness only supports Bitcoin in specific cases, such as high inflation or easy liquidity. However, investors tend to favor assets with long-established roles as stores of value when fear and capital preservation drive currency moves.
This perspective may help explain the present split. The dollar’s softness appears linked to rumors of yen intervention and broader geopolitical stress, including renewed U.S. tariff threats against Europe.
“If the devaluation stems from a crisis of confidence and extreme risk aversion – as now, with the dollar weakening on rumors of yen intervention – cryptos tend to fall alongside stocks,” the analyst wrote.
In this environment, investors are looking for proven stores of value.
“People are not chasing returns; they are protecting purchasing power because confidence elsewhere is dying fast,” posted market observer Daniel Tschinkel.
He added that physical gold is trading at high premiums in parts of Asia, indicating strong real demand beyond paper markets.
The scale of the move into precious metals is extraordinary. As of this writing, gold’s market cap had reached a record $35 trillion, and silver’s had hit $6 trillion, according to data from The Kobeissi Letter.
This increase has coincided with notable capital rotation away from crypto assets. On-chain analytics firm Lookonchain noted that an unnamed investor, who lost $18.8 million on Ethereum (ETH) in two weeks, has since spent over $36 million since December 13 to buy a gold-backed token and is now sitting on an unrealized profit of more than $2 million.
The performance gap is also stark. A comparison posted on X by analyst Ash Crypto shows that a $100,000 investment one year ago would now be worth $180,000 in gold and $342,000 in silver, but only $85,900 in BTC.
Additionally, trader Ted Pillows pointed out that the number one cryptocurrency is down 56% against gold since December 2024, with the monthly relative strength index for the pair at its lowest level ever.
All said, the current landscape suggests that until the macroeconomic fear driving investors into physical metals subsides, Bitcoin’s established narrative as a digital safe haven faces a serious test.
As GugaOnChain stated,
“For BTC to thrive, the weakness of the American currency must come from risk appetite, not from fear.”
The post Here’s Why Gold Is Beating Bitcoin in a Weak-Dollar Market appeared first on CryptoPotato.
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