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Ed Yardeni, a respected Wall Street economist who runs Yardeni Research, just made a bold call: gold has replaced Bitcoin as the premier safe-haven asset.
He's even flipping the script on a common phrase, saying we should think of gold as "physical Bitcoin" rather than calling Bitcoin "digital gold."
The numbers back up his argument. Gold has absolutely demolished Bitcoin's performance in 2025, jumping 60% compared to Bitcoin's 20% gain.
Over the past month, gold climbed 13% while Bitcoin fell 3%. In just the past week, gold rallied nearly 4% while Bitcoin tumbled 9%.
Gold recently blew past $4,200 per ounce after already exceeding Yardeni's $4,000 target for 2025. Now he's projecting $5,000 in 2026 and thinks it could hit $10,000 by the end of the decade.
The performance gap becomes even clearer during moments of market stress. When President Trump announced possible 100% tariffs against China last Friday, gold rallied hard. Bitcoin? It fell.
This represents a fundamental shift in how investors view these two assets. For years, crypto advocates promoted Bitcoin as "digital gold" - a modern alternative to the ancient safe haven. But when actual geopolitical tensions heat up, investors are choosing the real thing.
Yardeni's reasoning is straightforward: Gold has thousands of years of history as a store of value during crises. Bitcoin has existed for just 16 years and has mostly behaved like a speculative tech stock, not a safe haven.
The data proves his point. Bitcoin's 20% gain this year has tracked almost identically with the Nasdaq Composite, which is full of AI and tech stocks. That's not how a safe-haven asset should behave - safe havens are supposed to go up when risky assets go down.
Bitcoin is also dealing with serious structural problems right now. The crypto market just saw $19 billion in forced liquidations as overleveraged positions got wiped out.
When prices started falling, market-makers pulled back, creating a vicious cycle where selling pressure had nowhere to go, pushing prices down further.
Gold doesn't have those issues. There's no leverage problem causing forced liquidations. No liquidity crisis. When investors get nervous about wars, tariffs, or economic chaos, they can easily buy gold - and that's exactly what they're doing.
Yardeni, who holds a PhD from Yale and worked at the New York Federal Reserve, isn't some crypto skeptic throwing stones. He's making a practical observation: when geopolitical risks mount, investors are "heading for the hills to mine for gold as well as silver," not rushing into Bitcoin.
The idea that Bitcoin would replace gold as a safe haven was always more hope than reality, and 2025 is proving it decisively.
For everyday investors trying to protect their wealth during uncertain times, this matters. If you're worried about geopolitical tensions, inflation, or financial system stress, the data shows gold is doing the job while Bitcoin is struggling.
Bitcoin's 20% gain this year isn't bad in absolute terms - it's better than many stock market returns. But it's not performing like a safe haven. It's moving with tech stocks, getting hammered during liquidity crunches, and falling when geopolitical tensions spike.
Gold's 60% surge, meanwhile, shows it's doing exactly what a safe haven should do: attracting money when fear rises. The $10,000 price prediction from Yardeni might sound aggressive, but given gold's momentum and the ongoing geopolitical uncertainty, it's not crazy.
This doesn't mean Bitcoin is worthless or doomed. It still has utility in payments, as a speculative investment, and potentially as an inflation hedge over very long timeframes.
But the dream of Bitcoin replacing gold as humanity's go-to safe haven during crises? That's looking increasingly unrealistic.
For investors, the lesson is simple: don't confuse marketing narratives with reality. Bitcoin got sold as "digital gold," but when things get scary, people want the real thing. Gold has proven its value through literally thousands of years of human history.
Bitcoin is still trying to prove it can survive a few tough months.
If you're building a portfolio to weather geopolitical storms and economic uncertainty, Yardeni's advice is clear: gold deserves serious consideration. Bitcoin? Maybe not as much as the crypto enthusiasts would like you to believe.
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