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.
Bitcoin's performance in 2025 looks markedly different when measured against gold rather than the US dollar. While the dollar chart shows Bitcoin only about 10% below its January levels on weekly closes, the BTC/XAU ratio reveals a steeper 45% drawdown from its January 12 peak. This slide has persisted for 11 months, spanning 46 consecutive weeks of lower closes.
The year's volatility in dollar terms included a climb to roughly $124,700 in late October, followed by a breakdown to the mid-$80,000s in November. This swing erased more than $40,000 from peak to trough. Even after stabilizing, with prices recovering from $89,348 on December 5 to over $92,300 by December 12, the gold ratio only saw a modest 2-3% lift from December 5 to 11, failing to reverse the broader downtrend.
Gold's own strength has contributed to this gap, driven by softened real-rate expectations and increased demand from geopolitical turmoil. When benchmarked against gold, Bitcoin's autumn turbulence—a leverage-fueled surge and sharp reversal—appears as an extension of the ongoing weakness rather than a structural shift.
This cross-asset view separates Bitcoin's liquidity-driven dollar behavior from its hard-asset identity. Institutional allocators, who compare it to reserves like gold, see underperformance that pressures the narrative of Bitcoin as a superior hedge. For the ratio to break this pattern heading into 2026, Bitcoin would need to set higher weekly highs against a stable gold price, a scenario tied to expanding liquidity and easing haven demand.
The gold chart underscores that Bitcoin's volatility does not equate to directional strength against established stores of value.