Analysts suggest bitcoin bottom may near against gold

Analysts indicate that bitcoin's market bottom could be approaching when valued against gold, potentially as soon as next month. This view contrasts with longer-term dollar-based forecasts extending into late 2026. Factors like global uncertainty and ETF outflows have pressured bitcoin relative to gold's recent gains.

Bitcoin's price trajectory shows signs of a potential bottom when measured in gold terms, according to research from Mercado Bitcoin's Rony Szuster. In a report shared with CoinDesk, Szuster notes that bitcoin reached its high against gold in January 2025. Applying historical bear market patterns of 12 to 13 months, this suggests a bottom around February 2026, with recovery possibly starting in March.

In contrast, when priced in USD, bitcoin's most recent peak was in October 2025 at about $126,000. Following past cycles, the downturn could last until late 2026. Global events have influenced this divergence, including aggressive trade tariffs since Donald Trump’s new mandate, U.S. institutional disputes, and escalating tensions with China and Iran, leading to ongoing military conflict. The World Uncertainty Index has surged accordingly, boosting gold by more than 80% over the past year to $5,280, as capital shifted toward bullion.

Spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds have seen outflows of about $7.8 billion since November, equating to 12% of the $61.6 billion total inflows. However, large investors, or 'whales,' appear to be accumulating; Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Investment Company and Al Warda Investments added exposure to spot bitcoin ETFs in mid-February. Szuster advises a dollar-cost averaging strategy, stating, “Historically, buying during periods of fear has been more effective than buying during euphoria.” He adds, “Does this mean it's already the bottom? No. But it means that, statistically, we are in the zone where the best average prices are usually built.”

Separately, Samson Mow, CEO of Jan3, echoes the undervaluation theme on X, saying, “Bitcoin is about 24%-66% below its trend relative to gold's market cap or global money supply, while gold is overextended.” Gold futures closed at $5,247.90, with tokenized PAX Gold at $5,404.14. Mow highlights bitcoin’s Z-score against gold at -1.24; historically, drops below -2 have preceded major rallies, such as over 150% in the 12 months after November 2022 and over 300% following March 2020.

This optimistic view counters other analysts predicting a drop to $50,000, mirroring the 2022 bear market where bitcoin fell over 50% to a $60,000 low before recovering to near $66,400 amid recent Middle East developments.

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Split-image illustration contrasting shiny rising gold bars and charts with a falling, cracked Bitcoin price screen, emphasizing Bitcoin's underperformance vs. gold into 2025.
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Bitcoin extends gold underperformance into end of 2025

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Building on the 45% BTC/gold ratio slide through mid-December, gold surged 70% for the year while bitcoin fell 6% YTD amid persistent weakness. Bitcoin traded around $87,000, down 22% in Q4 after an October rout erased $1T from crypto markets, pressured by strong U.S. data and bearish technicals.

Bitcoin traded around $88,000 on Monday, recovering slightly from weekend lows but remaining close to its yearly bottom amid broader market uncertainties. Meanwhile, gold and silver pushed to record highs before pulling back, highlighting exhaustion in their surges. Analysts point to risks like a potential U.S. government shutdown as weighing on cryptocurrency sentiment.

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Bitcoin has underperformed gold throughout 2025, with its value in ounces dropping 45% from a January peak despite dollar volatility. This persistent decline highlights challenges to its role as a store of value. The ratio has fallen for 46 consecutive weeks, even amid recent price recoveries.

Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone has cautioned that bitcoin's recent slide may indicate broader financial stress and a potential U.S. recession. He predicts the cryptocurrency could drop to $10,000 as the post-2008 'buy the dip' era ends amid high stock valuations and low volatility. Market analyst Jason Fernandes views such a steep decline as a low-probability event requiring a severe credit shock.

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Bitcoin fell below $100,000 for the first time since June on Tuesday, marking a technical bear market with a drop of more than 20% from its October all-time high. Despite the plunge, cryptocurrency experts remain optimistic about a potential recovery amid ongoing volatility. The sell-off coincides with outflows from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs and sales by long-term holders.

Bitcoin's price rebounded modestly to around $70,000 on February 8 after a sharp drop to $60,000 earlier in the week, prompting crypto advocates to downplay the volatility as temporary. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong emphasized long-term bullishness, while skeptics like Peter Schiff celebrated the downturn. Institutional interest persists despite extreme fear in market sentiment.

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Continuing the pattern of weakness during U.S. trading hours, bitcoin slipped below $88,000 on Monday, December 22, 2025, after failing to hold $90,000 gains, while gold surged to a record $4,475 per ounce. Traders eye a record $28.5 billion options expiry on Deribit this Friday amid volatility, with bitcoin miners pivoting to AI outperforming peers.

 

 

 

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