The Great Divergence: Why Bitcoin and Gold Are Moving in Opposite Directions
Bitcoin and gold are moving in opposite directions this week, highlighting a growing divergence in market sentiment between the two classic stores of value.
While the precious metal has plunged roughly 10% from its recent peak over the past six days, Bitcoin has shown surprising resilience, holding about 2% higher on the week, according to CoinGecko data.
Gold Pulls Back After Strong Rally
The sharp drop in gold prices marks a significant reversal after an extended rally. According to Tim Sun, Senior Researcher at HashKey Group, the pullback reflects “a partial easing of geopolitical tensions, trade frictions, and profit-taking.”
Historically, gold’s sharp declines have been followed by a recovery period. Over the past 45 years, there have been 10 instances when gold fell 10% in six days, and in each case, it took around two months to recover, yielding an average 8.39% return.
However, analysts believe this time might be different. Ryan McMillin, CIO at Merkle Tree Capital, said that “a swift rebound shouldn’t be the base case,” adding that the pause in gold’s momentum could give Bitcoin “space to rally in a catch-up trade.”
Bitcoin’s Window of Opportunity
Sun and McMillin both noted that while gold consolidates, Bitcoin could benefit from renewed investor attention. Sun pointed out that gold demand is largely driven by sovereign wealth funds, central banks, and conservative asset managers, whereas Bitcoin’s flows stem mainly from ETFs and higher-risk investors.
Looking ahead, both experts remain bullish on Bitcoin in the near term. McMillin sees growing institutional adoption and liquidity as potential catalysts, while Sun expects a “choppy, upward-sloping path” for gold and a “range-higher trajectory” for Bitcoin, supported by gradually improving macro liquidity and persistent global fiscal deficits.








