The Gold Bug Makes His Case
Economist Peter Schiff spent his Sunday doing what he does best: telling people to ditch Bitcoin and buy gold. This time, though, the numbers might actually be on his side.
With gold pushing past $4,100 in early Asian trading while Bitcoin (BTC) struggles to hold $93,000, Schiff pointed out that the cryptocurrency's bear market looks "far more ferocious" when you measure it against the yellow metal. His advice? "Sell Bitcoin now and buy gold before you get mauled."
The leading cryptocurrency sits 24.50% below its all-time high in dollar terms, but measured against gold, the picture gets more dramatic.
The Math Behind the Mauling
Here's where things get interesting. At Bitcoin's all-time high in October, you needed 30.634 ounces of gold to buy one Bitcoin. Today? Just 23.26 ounces. That's a 24.07% decline.
But zoom out to August 13, when Bitcoin's value in gold terms hit a yearly peak of 36.52 ounces, and the picture gets even starker. Since then, the leading cryptocurrency has plummeted more than 36% when priced in gold.
| Cryptocurrency | Price in Gold ounces (Recorded at BTC ATH on Oct. 7) | Price in Gold ounces (Recorded at 9:20 p.m. ET) | Gains +/- |
| Bitcoin | 30.634 | 23.26 | -24.07% |
| Cryptocurrency | Price in Gold ounces (Recorded on Aug. 13) | Price in Gold ounces (Recorded at 9:20 p.m. ET) | Gains +/- |
| Bitcoin | 36.52 | 23.26 | -36.30% |
Of course, Bitcoin supporters have a counterargument ready. Over a five-year timeframe, Bitcoin is still up 134% against gold. Critics have repeatedly accused Schiff of "shifting the goalposts" by cherry-picking conveniently short timeframes to evaluate Bitcoin's performance.
Has Something Fundamentally Changed?
Capital market commentator Kobeissi Letter sees something potentially more significant happening. They've highlighted a "structural shift" in the cryptocurrency market since October's "Black Friday" crash, with gold and Bitcoin now moving in opposite directions.
The numbers tell the story. Since the October crash, Bitcoin has shed nearly 22% of its value while gold has gained 1.5%.
| Assets | Price (Recorded on Oct. 10) | Price (Recorded at 9:20 p.m. ET) | Gains +/- |
| Bitcoin | $121,704.74 | $94,965.10 | -21.90% |
| Spot Gold | $4,018.30 | $4,079.25 | +1.5% |
That divergence matters because for much of the past few years, Bitcoin and gold moved somewhat in tandem as alternative assets. If that relationship has broken down, it could signal a fundamental shift in how investors view cryptocurrency versus traditional safe haven assets.
Schiff's Bold Predictions
For his part, the longtime gold enthusiast isn't just talking his book on gold's recent performance. Schiff has predicted that the precious metal could eventually surpass $20,000 per ounce.
On the flip side, he's projected that the "cryptocurrency bubble" will eventually burst completely, with Americans being the most vulnerable group when it does.
Whether you view Schiff as a prescient economist or a perennial Bitcoin bear who's finally having his moment, the recent performance differential between gold and Bitcoin is hard to ignore. The question is whether this represents a temporary blip or something more lasting in the ongoing debate between digital and physical stores of value.