The post Why Capital Is Shifting From Bitcoin to Gold in Early 2026 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The first week of 2026 offered investors a distinctly unromanticThe post Why Capital Is Shifting From Bitcoin to Gold in Early 2026 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The first week of 2026 offered investors a distinctly unromantic

Why Capital Is Shifting From Bitcoin to Gold in Early 2026

The first week of 2026 offered investors a distinctly unromantic reminder: when the macro narrative shifts from “growth and inflation” to “institutional and governance risk”, performance is no longer about whose story sounds best, but about which assets look most independent under stress.

Gold and silver’s relative strength, alongside the relative weakness of BTC and ETH, captures that repricing. Hard assets are competing for an “independence premium”, while major cryptoassets are increasingly trading like high-volatility dollar risk. This isn’t to argue that crypto has lost its long-term case.

It’s that, in the current framework, the market is focused on three questions: What do you settle in? Who’s the marginal buyer? Which risk bucket do you sit in within a portfolio? On those points, the gap between precious metals and crypto is widening.

USD-Denominated Leverage and “Institutional Risk”

A quick look back at Bitcoin over the past year helps. During last April’s “Liberation Day” rally, BTC stabilised first and then rebounded, printing a new high of $126k six months later. The “digital gold” narrative mattered, but the real afterburner was USD-settled derivatives.

From March to October 2025, open interest in BTC Delta 1 contracts jumped from about $46bn to more than $92bn, giving BTC powerful leverage support and helping it outperform gold in the short run. After the peak, a broad crypto deleveraging and shifting institutional expectations pushed BTC into a sustained drawdown; gold, by contrast, kept grinding higher.

Source: Tradingview

One detail matters: as USDT/USDC and other stablecoins have become entrenched, USD-denominated leverage (not coin-margined leverage) has increasingly driven the marginal move.

As exposure is taken through more standardised, more levered channels—exchanges, perps, structured products—behaviour becomes more “portfolio-like”: add on risk-on, cut as part of a risk-budget reduction.

Whether it’s USD pricing, USD collateral, or cross-asset hedging built around the US rate curve, BTC is easily folded into the same USD-based risk framework. So when dollar liquidity tightens, whatever the trigger, BTC is often among the first to feel the effects of de-risking.

Source: Coinglass

Put differently, the market hasn’t suddenly “stopped believing” in digital gold. It’s increasingly treating BTC as a tradable macro factor—closer to high-volatility dollar beta than a store of value outside the system.

What gets sold isn’t so much spot BTC as USD-denominated BTC exposure. Once leverage becomes large enough for flows to dominate fundamentals, BTC behaves like a classic risk asset, being sensitive to liquidity, real rates, and fiscal policy.

Gold is different—at least for now. Its price is still driven mainly by spot supply and demand rather than leverage. It also retains monetary characteristics and is widely accepted as collateral: a kind of offshore hard currency. That makes it one of the few assets not directly dictated by day-to-day fiscal and monetary settings.

In this environment, that matters. The Trump administration has added to macro and policy uncertainty (think of what happened in Venezuela and Minnesota). For global investors, holding dollar assets and dollar leverage no longer feels like “parking the ship in a safe harbour”; even at the level of pricing and settlement, it carries harder-to-model institutional risk that can challenge the predictability of market rules.

As a result, reducing synthetic exposure to US policy risk is a sensible move. Assets more tightly bound to the dollar system—and which behave like risk assets in stress — tend to be cut first. Conversely, assets that are more clearly detached from sovereign credit and less dependent on “permissioned” financial infrastructure appear more favourable in the same risk model.

That’s a headwind for crypto and a tailwind for precious metals: independence is the point. When markets fear shifting policy boundaries and weaker rule predictability, gold (and other precious metals) earns a higher independence premium.

Since 2025, that premium has become more visible. A neat comparison is silver versus ETH. In the public imagination, ETH was once known as “digital silver” (and, in the PoW era, it arguably was). Both have been seen as smaller-cap assets, more prone to squeezes and leverage-driven moves.

But ETH, an equity-like asset deeply tied to the dollar system, has long since lost any independence premium. Silver, as one of the historical “offshore hard currencies”, has not. Investors are clearly willing to pay up for that independence.

The payoff of “independence” is stark: over the year, silver rose 165.78%, while ETH fell 5.01%. Source: TradingView.

The “Dollar Beta Discount”

USD-denominated leverage is also a key reason options markets remain structurally bearish on BTC and ETH. The “New Year effect” lifted both briefly in the first few sessions, but it didn’t shift the longer-dated positioning.

Over the past month, as investors have continued to price rising institutional risk in dollar assets, longer-dated bearishness in BTC and ETH has built further. Until the share of USD leverage falls meaningfully, “independence under institutional uncertainty” is likely to stay the market’s organising principle.

Source: Amberdata DerivativesSource: Amberdata Derivatives

At the same time, as valuation expectations for dollar-linked assets are marked down, investors are demanding more risk premia. The 10-year Treasury yield is still elevated at around 4.2%. With the Treasury and the Fed unable to fully dictate the pricing of 10-year duration, that level raises the hurdle rate for risk assets.

Yet the “dollar beta discount” associated with USD leverage compresses implied forward returns for BTC and ETH (to 5.06% and 3.93%, respectively). BTC may still look tolerable; ETH, much less so. ETH therefore wears a deeper dollar beta discount: yields aren’t competitive, and upside convexity is capped. None of this negates Ethereum’s long-term potential—but it does change allocation choices over a one-year horizon.

Source: ustreasuryyieldcurve.com

Crypto can, of course, bounce back: if financial conditions ease, policy uncertainty fades, or the market pivots back to pricing growth and liquidity, high-volatility assets will naturally respond. But macro investors are focused on taxonomy. When institutional uncertainty dominates, crypto trades like risk assets; precious metals trade more like “exceptionalism assets”.

That’s the message for early 2026: crypto hasn’t “failed”—it has simply, for now, lost its pricing slot as an independent asset in this macro regime.

Disclaimer: The information provided herein does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, trading advice, or any other sort of advice, and should not be treated as such. All content set out below is for informational purposes only.

Source: https://beincrypto.com/capital-shift-bitcoin-gold/

Market Opportunity
Bitcoin Logo
Bitcoin Price(BTC)
$89,524.27
$89,524.27$89,524.27
-1.27%
USD
Bitcoin (BTC) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

The Channel Factories We’ve Been Waiting For

The Channel Factories We’ve Been Waiting For

The post The Channel Factories We’ve Been Waiting For appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Visions of future technology are often prescient about the broad strokes while flubbing the details. The tablets in “2001: A Space Odyssey” do indeed look like iPads, but you never see the astronauts paying for subscriptions or wasting hours on Candy Crush.  Channel factories are one vision that arose early in the history of the Lightning Network to address some challenges that Lightning has faced from the beginning. Despite having grown to become Bitcoin’s most successful layer-2 scaling solution, with instant and low-fee payments, Lightning’s scale is limited by its reliance on payment channels. Although Lightning shifts most transactions off-chain, each payment channel still requires an on-chain transaction to open and (usually) another to close. As adoption grows, pressure on the blockchain grows with it. The need for a more scalable approach to managing channels is clear. Channel factories were supposed to meet this need, but where are they? In 2025, subnetworks are emerging that revive the impetus of channel factories with some new details that vastly increase their potential. They are natively interoperable with Lightning and achieve greater scale by allowing a group of participants to open a shared multisig UTXO and create multiple bilateral channels, which reduces the number of on-chain transactions and improves capital efficiency. Achieving greater scale by reducing complexity, Ark and Spark perform the same function as traditional channel factories with new designs and additional capabilities based on shared UTXOs.  Channel Factories 101 Channel factories have been around since the inception of Lightning. A factory is a multiparty contract where multiple users (not just two, as in a Dryja-Poon channel) cooperatively lock funds in a single multisig UTXO. They can open, close and update channels off-chain without updating the blockchain for each operation. Only when participants leave or the factory dissolves is an on-chain transaction…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:09
Will XRP Price Increase In September 2025?

Will XRP Price Increase In September 2025?

Ripple XRP is a cryptocurrency that primarily focuses on building a decentralised payments network to facilitate low-cost and cross-border transactions. It’s a native digital currency of the Ripple network, which works as a blockchain called the XRP Ledger (XRPL). It utilised a shared, distributed ledger to track account balances and transactions. What Do XRP Charts Reveal? […]
Share
Tronweekly2025/09/18 00:00
China Blocks Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D as Local Chips Rise

China Blocks Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D as Local Chips Rise

The post China Blocks Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D as Local Chips Rise appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. China Blocks Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D as Local Chips Rise China’s internet regulator has ordered the country’s biggest technology firms, including Alibaba and ByteDance, to stop purchasing Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000D GPUs. According to the Financial Times, the move shuts down the last major channel for mass supplies of American chips to the Chinese market. Why Beijing Halted Nvidia Purchases Chinese companies had planned to buy tens of thousands of RTX Pro 6000D accelerators and had already begun testing them in servers. But regulators intervened, halting the purchases and signaling stricter controls than earlier measures placed on Nvidia’s H20 chip. Image: Nvidia An audit compared Huawei and Cambricon processors, along with chips developed by Alibaba and Baidu, against Nvidia’s export-approved products. Regulators concluded that Chinese chips had reached performance levels comparable to the restricted U.S. models. This assessment pushed authorities to advise firms to rely more heavily on domestic processors, further tightening Nvidia’s already limited position in China. China’s Drive Toward Tech Independence The decision highlights Beijing’s focus on import substitution — developing self-sufficient chip production to reduce reliance on U.S. supplies. “The signal is now clear: all attention is focused on building a domestic ecosystem,” said a representative of a leading Chinese tech company. Nvidia had unveiled the RTX Pro 6000D in July 2025 during CEO Jensen Huang’s visit to Beijing, in an attempt to keep a foothold in China after Washington restricted exports of its most advanced chips. But momentum is shifting. Industry sources told the Financial Times that Chinese manufacturers plan to triple AI chip production next year to meet growing demand. They believe “domestic supply will now be sufficient without Nvidia.” What It Means for the Future With Huawei, Cambricon, Alibaba, and Baidu stepping up, China is positioning itself for long-term technological independence. Nvidia, meanwhile, faces…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:37