The cryptocurrency market has experienced one of its most significant downturns on record, with approximately $1.88 trillion exiting the market as investor sentiment turned sharply negative. Mounting macroeconomic pressures, including tighter monetary conditions and a massive liquidation cascade, ripped through digital asset portfolios.

Amid the winter gripping the crypto landscape, other segments of the financial market continued to outperform, attracting trillions of dollars in capital and drawing investors away from riskier assets. Precious metals, particularly gold and silver, have emerged as the primary beneficiaries of this flight to safety.

Several catalysts have driven this shift, most notably the prevailing risk-off environment in which investors have grown increasingly cautious and are rotating capital into safer, more established asset classes. 

The central question now is whether, over the medium to long term, assets like Bitcoin, currently trading at approximately $71,000, and the broader altcoin market will continue to suffer as precious metals command a growing share of global investment flows.

But not every expert reads the situation as a zero-sum competition. Cristina Carata, Lead Researcher for Digital Assets and Blockchain at Humans.ai, argues that the framing itself may be flawed. 

“Bitcoin or the broader crypto ecosystem should not be seen as structurally detrimental by the recent success of gold and silver,” she says. “Rather, this success signals a macroeconomic shift.”

Investor Takeaway

If history is any guide, periods of capital flight into safe havens often precede renewed interest in higher-risk assets like Bitcoin once macro uncertainty begins to ease.

Why the Broader Market Context Matters

Two metrics help explain the scale of this concern: the growing divergence between crypto and precious metals and the state of the Global Money Supply.

Global M2, the broadest measure of liquidity across major economies, including the United States, China, and the eurozone, currently stands at approximately $137 trillion. That figure represents an enormous pool of deployable capital, encompassing cash, credit instruments, and demand deposits. 

Yet despite this record level of liquidity, the crypto market has conspicuously failed to benefit. Capital has instead rotated into traditional safe havens like gold and government bonds or sat on the sidelines entirely. It is a striking disconnect that points to something beyond a simple liquidity story, which is that the market is in a decisively risk-off posture.

In a risk-off environment, investors grow more conservative and avoid high-volatility assets, a category that crypto firmly occupies. Rather than chasing returns, they are demanding clearer visibility into the risk-to-reward profile of every position before committing capital. It is this shift in sentiment, more than any shortage of liquidity, that has kept the $137 trillion from finding its way into digital assets.

Arrash Yasavolian, Founder and CEO of Glitch Financial, pushes back on the conventional wisdom that liquidity has simply stopped mattering to crypto. 

“I’d push back on the idea that liquidity stopped mattering—it still drives everything at the margin,” he says. 

“What changed is that crypto is no longer a pure liquidity beta trade. There are ETFs now, institutional balance sheets involved, and regulatory constraints. So even if liquidity ticks up, it doesn’t automatically translate into speculative capital flows. In fact, I’d argue crypto’s sensitivity to liquidity may have peaked in prior cycles.”

The Liquidation Event and Its Cascade Effect

The inflection point arrived on October 10, which marked one of the most significant capital outflow events in the history of the crypto market: approximately $19 billion was removed from the ecosystem in a single episode.

The divergence between crypto and precious metals began in earnest following this event. Prior to October 10, Bitcoin and gold had largely moved in tandem, tracking each other’s trajectory as both benefited from broader liquidity tailwinds. Since that point, however, the two assets have decoupled sharply.

The numbers tell a stark story. Bitcoin has declined approximately 39% from that divergence point, while gold has surged roughly 28% over the same period. In dollar terms, Bitcoin’s market capitalization shed approximately $1.06 trillion, while gold added an estimated $8.2 trillion in market value during the same timeframe.

Bitcoin vs. Gold (blue line) performance comparison chart. Source: TradingView

This data strongly suggests that a meaningful portion of the liquidity that previously resided in the crypto market, including altcoins, has since migrated into gold as a profitable safe-haven asset. A further portion has likely moved into dry powder, with investors sitting on the sidelines and preserving capital while they wait for conditions to stabilize.

Yet Yasavolian cautions against the clean “rotation” narrative that has dominated market commentary. “I think the ‘rotation into gold’ explanation is a little too neat,” he says. 

“If capital were truly fleeing crypto for metals, you’d see a much cleaner inverse relationship. What I see instead is investors getting selective. Gold works when people are uneasy but still want exposure. Bitcoin, despite the digital gold narrative, still trades like a barometer for liquidity. When liquidity tightens or selling is required, it rolls over first. That’s less about capital fleeing and more about leverage coming out of the system.”

Investor Takeaway

Crypto’s relationship with global liquidity is evolving as institutional participation and regulatory constraints reshape market dynamics.

Gold vs. Bitcoin: Competition or Coexistence?

The divergence in performance has renewed debate over whether gold’s rally directly undermines Bitcoin’s “digital gold” thesis. Yasavolian thinks the comparison actually reveals something more nuanced. “I don’t think it challenges it, as it actually exposes how different they actually are,” he explains. 

“Gold is owned by institutions and banks that don’t move fast. Bitcoin is owned by participants who do. In uncertain environments, gold holds its ground or appreciates while Bitcoin tends to see downside. Over time, they may serve similar roles, but they get there through very different paths.”

Carata takes a similarly measured view, drawing a distinction between the asset classes that is too often overlooked in mainstream analysis. “Gold and silver are responding to short-term inflation hedging demand and to a growing geopolitical uncertainty,” she says. “By comparison, Bitcoin behaves more and more as a credibility hedge due to its institutional and algorithmic predictability.” 

In her research, both assets are responding to the same underlying anxiety characterized by a declining trust in monetary and fiscal institutions, but expressing it through different mechanisms. “Gold appeals to historical certainty, while Bitcoin appeals to predictable rules.”

This framing reorients the competitive narrative considerably. Rather than gold stealing Bitcoin’s mandate, the two assets may be serving different investor psychology within the same macro thesis. This is a distinction with meaningful implications for how the market eventually resolves.

What This Means for Altcoins

If Bitcoin occupies an arguable middle ground between safe haven and risk asset, altcoins face a considerably starker reality. 

Carata is direct on this point: “Gold’s rise may absorb speculative capital from altcoins, but in a temporary manner.” More critically, she argues that the current environment is forcing a long-overdue reckoning across the altcoin market. 

“The real differentiation is not between metals and Bitcoin, but between assets that function as long-term monetary anchors and those altcoins that depend primarily on liquidity cycles.”

Yasavolian frames the altcoin problem through the lens of investor mindset rather than pure capital mechanics. “I don’t think metal rallies directly pull liquidity from altcoins. It’s more about mindset,” he says. 

“When metals lead, investors are choosing stability over optionality. Altcoins are pure optionality as they depend largely on expanding risk appetite. When conditions tighten, it’s not that money ‘rotates’ into gold — it’s just that the premium built into higher-beta assets gets repriced.”

The read-across is significant. It means altcoins are not simply losing a capital competition to gold. They are being devalued by the very conditions that have made gold attractive, and that devaluation reflects a structural question about their usefulness beyond speculation and liquidity-driven momentum.

Investor Takeaway

Rather than replacing gold, Bitcoin may be evolving into a complementary hedge built on predictable monetary rules rather than historical precedent

Geopolitical Uncertainty and the Flight to Safety

The sustained inflow into gold and silver becomes even more understandable when viewed through the lens of ongoing geopolitical uncertainty. 

A string of destabilizing events, most prominently the escalating tariff war between the United States and major trading partners, including China, has reinforced the case for defensive positioning. 

As long as these geopolitical flashpoints continue to generate uncertainty, investors will find compelling reasons to favor assets with centuries-long track records of preserving value over digitally native alternatives that remain relatively untested in sustained bear markets.

Yasavolian adds another dimension to the cautious sentiment currently gripping markets. “Gold strength and weak alts usually mean people want protection but don’t want to take venture-style risk,” he notes, before flagging an emerging concern among institutional investors: “It appears that investors are increasingly questioning the risk of quantum computing with Bitcoin.” 

That anxiety, layered on top of existing macro pressures, adds a further variable to Bitcoin’s near-term trajectory that the market has not yet fully priced.

When Does the Tide Turn?

The question most investors are now asking is not whether crypto will recover, but what signals will reliably mark the turning point. Yasavolian argues that conventional indicators, including rate cuts and policy headlines, are the wrong things to watch. “People look for rate cuts or policy headlines. 

I think that’s backward,” he says. “The real signal is when markets stop reacting defensively to good news. When credit spreads tighten without forcing a flight to gold, when volatility falls and stays down, that’s when I expect to see capital move back into higher beta. Crypto doesn’t need perfect macro; it just needs stability.”

Carata, meanwhile, sees the current environment not as a threat to crypto’s long-term thesis but as a validation of it. “A strong precious-metals market in 2026 is less a competitor to Bitcoin than a macroeconomic validation of its underlying thesis,” she argues. 

“What this environment really does is not weaken Bitcoin, but force many altcoins to demonstrate real economic usefulness beyond liquidity and speculation.”

The core tension remains unresolved. Capital that has exited crypto may not return until macroeconomic conditions shift, risk appetite recovers, and the geopolitical backdrop stabilizes. But if the experts are right, the more consequential question may not be when Bitcoin recovers—it may be which altcoins survive long enough to matter when it does.