Gold vs Bitcoin: Analyzing 12 Years of Data, Who Is the Real Winner?

By: blockbeats|2026/01/30 23:00:01
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Original Title: "Gold vs Bitcoin: 12-Year Data Tells You Who the Real Winner Is"
Original Authors: Viee, Amelia, Biteye

On January 29, 2026, gold plunged 3% in a single day, marking its largest recent drop. Just a few days earlier, gold had broken through $5600 per ounce to hit a new high, with silver also following suit. In the early days of 2026, prices were well above JPMorgan Chase's expectations from mid-December.

Gold vs Bitcoin: Analyzing 12 Years of Data, Who Is the Real Winner?

Data Source: JPMorgan Chase

In contrast, Bitcoin remained within a weak consolidation range following a pullback, further distancing itself from traditional precious metals in terms of market performance. Despite being called "digital gold," Bitcoin seems to have yet to find stability. In periods traditionally favorable to gold and silver, such as during inflation and war, Bitcoin behaves more like a risk asset, fluctuating with risk sentiment. Why is this so?

Without understanding Bitcoin's actual role in the current market structure, it is impossible to make rational asset allocation decisions.

Therefore, this article attempts to answer from multiple perspectives:

· Why has the price of precious metals surged recently?

· Why has Bitcoin underperformed significantly in the past year?

· Looking back in history, how has Bitcoin performed during gold rallies?

· For the average investor, how should one navigate this divided market environment?

1. A Game Across Cycles: The Ten-Year Showdown Between Gold, Silver, and Bitcoin

From a long-term perspective, Bitcoin remains one of the highest returning assets. However, over the past year, Bitcoin's performance has lagged notably behind gold and silver. The market trend from 2025 to early 2026 has shown a stark binary differentiation, with the precious metals market entering a phase known as a "super cycle" while Bitcoin has shown a slight decline. Below are the comparative data for three key periods:

Data Source: TradingView

Data Source: TradingView

This kind of divergent trend is not new. As early as the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, gold and silver quickly surged due to safe-haven sentiment, while Bitcoin experienced a sharp drop of over 30%, followed by a rebound. During the 2017 bull market, Bitcoin surged by 1359% while gold only rose by 7%. In the 2018 bear market, Bitcoin plummeted by 63% while gold only fell by 5%. In the 2022 bear market, Bitcoin fell by 57% while gold saw a slight increase of 1%. This seems to indicate that the price correlation between Bitcoin and gold is not stable. Bitcoin appears more like an asset at the intersection of traditional finance and new finance, with both technological growth attributes and susceptibility to liquidity strength, making it harder to equate with gold, a perennial safe-haven asset.

Therefore, when we are surprised by the "digital gold not rising, real gold surging," what we really should discuss is: Is Bitcoin really considered a safe-haven asset by the market? From the current trading structure and main fund behavior, the answer may be negative. In the short term (1-2 years), gold and silver have indeed outperformed Bitcoin, but in the long term (10+ years), Bitcoin's returns are 65 times that of gold. With an extended timeframe, Bitcoin has proven with a 213-fold return that it may not be "digital gold," but it is the greatest asymmetric investment opportunity of this era.

II. Analysis of Reasons: Why Have Gold and Silver Risen More Sharply Than BTC in Recent Years?

Behind the frequent new highs in gold and silver and the lagging Bitcoin narrative is not only the divergence in price trends but also a deep deviation in asset attributes, market perception, and macro logic. We can understand the watershed between "digital gold" and "traditional gold" from the following four perspectives.

2.1. Amid a Trust Crisis, Central Banks Lead Gold Purchases

In an era of strong currency depreciation expectations, who continues to buy determines the long-term trend of the asset. From 2022 to 2024, central banks worldwide have made large-scale gold purchases for three consecutive years, with an average annual net purchase of over 1,000 tons. Whether it is emerging markets like China and Poland or resource-rich countries like Kazakhstan and Brazil, they all view gold as a core reserve asset to hedge against dollar risk. The key is that the higher the price rises, the more central banks buy—this "buy more as it gets more expensive" behavior pattern reflects the central banks' steadfast belief in gold as the ultimate reserve asset. Bitcoin struggles to gain central bank recognition, which is a structural issue: gold has a 5,000-year consensus and does not rely on any country's credit, while Bitcoin requires electricity, a network, and private keys, making central banks hesitant to allocate on a large scale.

Data Source: World Gold Council, ING Research

2.2 Gold-Silver Reversion to "Physical First"

As global geopolitical conflicts continue to escalate and financial sanctions are frequently imposed, asset security will become a question of whether they can be cashed out. After the new U.S. government took office in 2025, policies such as high tariffs and export restrictions were frequently implemented, disrupting the global market order. Gold naturally became the only ultimate asset that does not rely on another country's credit. At the same time, the value of silver in the industrial sector began to unfold: the expansion of industries such as new energy, AI data centers, and photovoltaic manufacturing increased the industrial demand for silver, driven by a real supply-demand mismatch. In this scenario, silver speculation and fundamentals resonate, leading to a more vigorous rise compared to gold.

2.3 Bitcoin's Structural Dilemma: From "Safe Haven Asset" to "Leveraged Tech Stock"

Previously, people thought of Bitcoin as a tool to combat central bank money printing. However, with the approval of ETFs and institutional entry, the fund structure has undergone a fundamental change. Wall Street institutions include Bitcoin in their portfolios, usually as a "highly elastic risk asset." We can see from the data that in the second half of 2025, Bitcoin's correlation with U.S. tech stocks reached 0.8, an unprecedented high correlation, indicating that Bitcoin is becoming more like a leveraged tech stock. When risks arise in the market, institutions are more willing to sell Bitcoin for cash, unlike gold, which is bought.

Data Source: Bloomberg

What is more representative is the liquidation during the crash on October 10, 2025, where $19 billion in leveraged positions was liquidated in one go. Bitcoin did not demonstrate its safe haven property but instead experienced a collapse due to its high leverage structure.

2.4 Why Is Bitcoin Still Falling?

In addition to the structural dilemma, there are three underlying reasons for Bitcoin's recent continued decline:

1️⃣ Crypto Ecosystem Predicament, AI Taking Over Business. The development of the crypto ecosystem has severely lagged behind. While the AI sector is attracting massive investments, the crypto world's "innovations" are still playing with memes. There are no killer applications, no real demand, only speculation.

2️⃣ Shadow of Quantum Computing. The threat of quantum computing is not baseless. Although true quantum decryption will take many years, this narrative has made some institutions hesitant. Google's Willow chip has already demonstrated quantum advantages, and although the Bitcoin community is researching post-quantum signature schemes, upgrades require community consensus, slowing down the post-quantum process but also making the network more robust.

3️⃣OGs are selling off. Many early Bitcoin holders are exiting. They feel that Bitcoin has become "tainted" — transitioning from a decentralized idealistic currency to Wall Street's speculative tool. After the ETF approval, Bitcoin's core spirit seems to be lost. MicroStrategy, BlackRock, Fidelity...Institutional holdings are growing, and Bitcoin's price is no longer determined by retail investors but by institutions' balance sheets. This is both a positive (liquidity) and a curse (losing its original purpose).

III. In-Depth Analysis: The Historical Relationship Between Bitcoin and Gold

By examining the historical relationship between Bitcoin and gold, it is found that their price correlation during major economic events is quite limited, with their performance often diverging. Therefore, the term "digital gold" is repeatedly mentioned not necessarily because Bitcoin truly resembles gold, but because the market needs a familiar reference point.

First, Bitcoin's correlation with gold was not a safe-haven resonance from the beginning. In the early days, Bitcoin was still in its infancy within the geek community, with its market value and attention minuscule. In 2013, during the banking crisis in Cyprus with some capital control measures implemented, the price of gold plummeted by about 15% from its peak; meanwhile, Bitcoin surged to over $1,000. Some interpreted this as capital flight and safe-haven funds flowing into Bitcoin. However, in hindsight, the 2013 Bitcoin frenzy was largely driven by speculation and early sentiment, and its safe-haven attributes were not widely recognized. The significant drop in gold and surge in Bitcoin that year led to a very low correlation — a monthly return correlation of only 0.08, almost zero.

Second, true synchrony only occurred during the liquidity flood stage. After the 2020 pandemic, central banks worldwide unprecedentedly injected liquidity, causing investors to increasingly worry about fiat currency overissuance and inflation. Both gold and Bitcoin strengthened. In August 2020, the price of gold hit a then-historic high (surpassing $2,000), while Bitcoin broke $20,000 by the end of 2020, then rapidly surged above $60,000 in 2021. Many believe that during this period, Bitcoin began to demonstrate its "inflation-resistant" digital gold property, benefiting like gold from loose monetary policies worldwide. However, it should be noted that fundamentally, the loose environment provided a common ground for both to rise. Bitcoin's volatility is much higher than that of gold (annualized volatility of 72% vs. 16%).

Third, the long-term correlation between Bitcoin and gold is unstable, and the digital gold narrative is yet to be validated. Data shows that the correlation between gold and Bitcoin has been fluctuating for an extended period and, overall, is not stable. Especially after 2020, while their prices sometimes rise simultaneously, their correlation has not significantly strengthened but often shows negative correlations. This indicates that Bitcoin has not consistently played the role of "digital gold," and its trend is mainly driven by independent market logic.

Data Source: Newhedge

Upon review, it is evident that gold is a repeatedly verified safe-haven asset in history, while Bitcoin is more like an unconventional hedging tool that only stands in a specific narrative. When a crisis truly strikes, the market will still prioritize certainty over imaginative space.

IV. The Essence of Bitcoin: Not Digital Gold, But Digital Liquidity

Let's look at it from a different perspective: What role should Bitcoin really play? Is it truly meant to exist as "digital gold"?

Firstly, the underlying properties of Bitcoin determine its fundamental difference from gold. Gold is physically scarce, independent of a network, and system-free, making it a true doomsday asset. In the event of a geopolitical crisis, gold can be physically delivered at any time, serving as the ultimate safe haven. Bitcoin, on the other hand, is built on electricity, a network, and computational power, with ownership relying on private keys and transactions depending on network connectivity.

Secondly, Bitcoin's market performance is increasingly resembling that of a high-resilience tech asset. During times of ample liquidity and rising risk appetite, Bitcoin often leads the gains. However, in an environment of rising interest rates and heightened risk aversion, institutions may also reduce their Bitcoin holdings. The current market tendency is to believe that Bitcoin has not truly transformed from a "risk asset" to a "safe-haven asset" yet. It exhibits both a high-growth, high-volatility speculative aspect and a safe-haven aspect that can withstand uncertainty. This "risk-to-safe-haven" ambiguity may only be clarified through more cycles and more crises. Before that, the market still tends to view Bitcoin as a high-risk, high-return speculative asset, associating its performance with that of tech stocks.

Perhaps only when Bitcoin demonstrates a stable store of value similar to gold, can this perception truly be reversed. However, Bitcoin will not lose its long-term value; it still possesses scarcity, global transferability, and the institutional advantage of decentralization. It's just that in today's market environment, its positioning is more complex, serving as both a pricing anchor, a trading asset, and a speculative tool.

Key Takeaway: Gold is an inflation-resistant safe-haven asset, while Bitcoin is a growth asset with stronger yield characteristics. Gold is suitable for preserving value in times of economic uncertainty, with low volatility (16%) and minimal drawdowns (-18%), acting as an asset "ballast." Bitcoin is suitable for allocation when liquidity is abundant and risk appetite is rising, with an annualized return of up to 60.6%. However, it also comes with high volatility (72%) and a significant drawdown of up to -76%. This is not an either-or choice but a combination of asset allocation.

V. KOL Insights Compilation

During this round of macro repricing, gold and Bitcoin are playing different roles. Gold is more like a "shield," used to withstand external shocks such as war, inflation, sovereign risk, while Bitcoin is like a "spear," seizing the value-added opportunities of technological change.

OKX CEO Xu Mingxing @star_okx emphasized that gold is a product of old trust, while Bitcoin is the cornerstone of future-oriented new credit. Choosing gold in 2026 is like betting on a failing system. Bitget CEO @GracyBitget stated that despite inevitable market fluctuations, Bitcoin's long-term fundamentals have not changed, and he still believes in its future performance. KOL @KKaWSB cited Polymarket's forecast data, predicting that Bitcoin will outperform gold and the S&P 500 in 2026 and believes that value realization will come.

KOL @BeiDao_98 provided an interesting technical perspective: Bitcoin's RSI compared to gold has once again fallen below 30. Historically, this signal indicates that a Bitcoin bull market is imminent. Well-known trader Vida @Vida_BWE approached it from short-term fund sentiment, believing that after the surge in gold and silver, the market is eager to find the next "dollar alternative asset." Therefore, he took a small position in BTC, betting on the FOMO sentiment of fund rotation in the next few weeks.

KOL @chengzi_95330 presented a broader narrative path. He believes that traditional hard assets such as gold and silver should first absorb the credit impact of currency devaluation, and once they fulfill their roles, then it's Bitcoin's turn to enter the scene. This "first traditional, then digital" path may be the story that the current market is unfolding.

Six. Three Recommendations for Retail Investors

Faced with the difference in price appreciation between Bitcoin, gold, and silver, the most common question for ordinary retail investors is, "Which one should I invest in?" This question does not have a standard answer, but we can provide four practical suggestions:

1. Understand the positioning of each asset and clarify the allocation purpose. Gold and silver still have a strong "hedging" property during macro uncertainty, suitable for defensive positioning; Bitcoin is currently more suitable for increasing positions when risk appetite is rising, and the technology growth logic is dominant. However, be careful not to use gold to chase overnight riches. Want to hedge against inflation and seek safe haven → Buy gold; Want long-term high returns → Buy Bitcoin (but be prepared for a -70% drawdown).

2. Do not fantasize that Bitcoin will always outperform everything. Bitcoin's growth comes from the technological narrative, fund consensus, and institutional breakthrough, not from a linear return model. It will not outperform gold, the Nasdaq, or oil every year, but in the long run, its attributes as a decentralized asset still hold value. Do not completely dismiss it during short-term drawdowns, nor go all-in blindly during surges.

3. Build a Portfolio, Embrace the Reality of Different Assets Performing in Different Cycles. If you have a weak grasp of global liquidity and limited risk tolerance, you may consider a combination of Gold ETF + a small amount of BTC to address various macro scenarios; if you have a stronger risk preference, you can also combine ETH, AI tracks, RWA, and other emerging assets to construct a higher volatility portfolio.

4. Can Gold and Silver Still Be Bought Now? Be Cautious About Chasing High Prices, Prioritize Buying the Dip. In the long run, gold, as an asset favored by global central banks, and silver, with its industrial properties, still hold allocation value during turbulent periods. However, in the short term, they have seen significant gains, facing technical correction pressure, as evidenced by gold's 3% single-day plunge on January 29. If you are a long-term investor, you may consider waiting for a pullback before gradually buying in, such as gold below $5000 and silver below $100, for phased deployment; if you are a short-term speculator, you need to pay attention to the pace, not rushing in to catch the final surge when market sentiment is at its hottest. In contrast, although Bitcoin's performance has been poor, if liquidity expectations improve in the future, it may actually present a window for buying at a low. Pay more attention to the pace, avoid chasing rallies or selling off, as this is the most crucial defensive strategy for ordinary people.

In Conclusion: Understand Positioning to Survive!

When gold rises, no one will question Bitcoin's value because of it; when Bitcoin falls, it also does not mean that gold is the only answer. In this era that is reshaping the anchor of value, no single asset can meet all needs at once.

From 2024 to 2025, gold and silver take the lead. But extending the time frame to 12 years, Bitcoin shows a 213x return, proving that it may not be the "digital gold," but it is the greatest asymmetric investment opportunity of this era. Last night's gold plunge may be the end of a short-term adjustment or the beginning of a larger correction.

However, for ordinary traders, what truly matters is understanding the role positioning behind different assets and establishing their own investment logic to survive through the cycles.

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