Gold simply did what safe havens are supposed to do: it went vertical.
On January 26, the precious metal crossed the psychological barrier of $5,000 and briefly exceeded $5,100 per ounce as investors scrambled for insurance. The move extends a historic streak that saw the metal rise 64% in 2025, marking the metal’s biggest annual gain since 1979.
The rise shows investors are moving aggressively against a trifecta of modern concerns: rising geopolitics, policy unpredictability and an eroding sense of fiscal and institutional stability.
Bitcoin, meanwhile, continues to be labeled “digital gold” without being paid for in the same way. The largest cryptocurrency is currently trading around $87,950, down about 2% since the beginning of the year.
This divergence we see today is not a failure of the asset class. Instead, it is simply a reflection of current maturity. Gold has had thousands of years to build its reputation as a store of value. Bitcoin has less than twenty years behind it.
So this is asking a lot for a teenage asset to behave with the same seriousness as a millennia-old metal during a real global crisis.
However, the market is watching it closely. Every time gold spikes and Bitcoin drops, the correlation data is updated. And right now, the data says the two assets don’t speak the same language yet.
The weight behind the gold rally
Gold’s rally is a flow story with deep “institutional inertia” behind it.
Market observers view the current price action as a classic safe-haven response to geopolitical tensions and fiscal uncertainty.
This can be linked to the weakening dollar and increased central bank diversification against the US, keeping the bid persistent rather than event-driven.

Crucial details reinforce the forward-looking framing: This isn’t just retail panic. The rally is being fueled by continued central bank buying and significant inflows into gold-backed ETFs.
Analysts are now anticipating scenarios where the metal crosses the $6,000 mark in 2026, with upside potential. predictions rising to $7,150 if uncertainty remains high.
JPMorgan’s own model has been explicit about these structural tailwinds. The bank expects gold to average about $5,055 per ounce in the fourth quarter of 2026.
This projection assumes that investor demand and central bank purchases will reach approximately 566 tonnes per quarter in 2026.
Moreover, JPMorgan has done that repeated a target of $6,000 per ounce by 2028 as a long-term goal.
The bottom line is clear. Gold behaves like a neutral reserve amid credibility stress.
The buyer base, which consists of central banks, traditional allocators and ETFs, already knows how to price them in a crisis. This is a mature market that responds efficiently to stress signals.
Market Plumbing Reflects Bitcoin’s Refugee Status
Bitcoin’s port story overlaps significantly with gold on paper. It offers scarcity, a non-sovereign monetary status and theoretical protection against humiliation.
However, the transmission mechanisms for both assets differ significantly.
The difference is most visible in the ETFs’ flow data.
Facts from SoSo Value shows that the 12 US spot BTC ETFs have started 2026 with net inflows of roughly $1.2 billion through the first two trading days, volume that suggests institutions will deploy capital into BTC when the macro environment feels constructive.
But the subsequent activity was the opposite of “safe haven” behavior. The spot BTC ETFs posted net outflows of $1.33 billion for the week ended January 23, the worst week since February 2025.


This outflow represents a classic de-risking behavior. It shows that capital flows away as uncertainty increases, which is exactly the pattern that gold is currently replacing.
Then there is the issue of derivatives positioning. Data from Deribits too showed that the BTC markets moved from call interest back to defensive hedging at the beginning of the year. Specifically, a 7-day smile costs a premium of approximately 2.8% over out-of-the-money puts.
This is a quantitative shorthand for the fact that traders want protection. True havens don’t require investors to pay for downward convexity every time the headlines pop up.
So why the difference? Because BTC still functions as a liquidity valve in times of stress. It is traded 24/7, is easy to sell and is often used to raise money quickly. Gold, on the other hand, is where cash hides.
How Bitcoin can turn gold
If the market is ultimately going to reward ‘digital gold’ with gold-like behavior, some measurable shifts need to happen. These shifts should ideally occur during the next risk-off impulse, and not after it has passed.
First, ETFs need to become countercyclical. The haven version of BTC is one in which ETF flows increase during stock market downturns and weeks of macro fear. This would represent a marked change from the current dynamic of shifting from inflows at the beginning of the year to large weekly outflows.
Second, the options market’s skew must normalize. A persistent put premium (such as the recent 2.8% short-term tilt) indicates that the market still expects BTC to amplify volatility rather than absorb it. A sanctuary regime looks like a flatter skew and significantly less demand for accident insurance.
Third, volatility must decrease structurally rather than temporarily. Gold can rise because it is ‘boring’. Bitcoin cannot credibly serve as the reserve of the internet if it still behaves like a leveraged macro trade when policy risk increases.
Fourth, the buyer mix must expand beyond opportunistic venture capital. The marginal buyers of gold today are reserve managers and long-duration allocators. BTC’s marginal buyers are still heavily influenced by ETF momentum and derivatives positioning, which can quickly reverse.
What next for Bitcoin and gold?
Looking ahead, we can identify three different scenarios for how this relationship between Bitcoin and gold evolves.
- Scenario A: “Gold retains the crown; BTC remains a proxy for liquidity.”
If geopolitical tensions and concerns about fiscal credibility persist, gold will remain the hedge of choice. BTC may rank higher on its own adoption cycle, but will not reliably recover on fear days. This scenario is consistent with today’s divergent flows and defensive options pricing.
- Scenario B: “Policy easing lifts BTC without turning it into a haven.”
If growth slows and markets begin to price easier financial conditions, BTC may outperform as liquidity improves and ETF demand returns. However, the driver here is still risk appetite, not capital preservation. Think of this as a “high beta rebound” rather than a “storm shelter.”
- Scenario C: “Credibility shock plus regulatory maturity equals a partial bid for a port.”
The most interesting case is that gold’s credibility story is increasing and BTC’s market structure is maturing to the point where major allocators are treating it as insurance rather than a trade.
Notably, Standard Chartered lowered its 2026 BTC forecast from $300,000 to $150,000. The bank cited slower institutional purchases through ETFs as the reason. This implies that the path to ‘digital gold’ is through more stable institutional demand, and not just through narrative power.
For the time being, gold is bought as protection against institutions. Bitcoin is still priced as a bet on it.
The moment these tables turn, when BTC attracts steady inflows because the headlines are ugly and options no longer demand a premium for survival, then “digital gold” will begin to follow real gold.




