What has been happening in recent days in the financial markets is sensational: gold is stealing the spotlight from Bitcoin.
Generally, the exact opposite happens, with the volatility of the BTC price far exceeding that of an ounce of gold, but this time it is the price of the yellow metal that is attracting attention.
It is even possible that the gold ETF market is draining capital from that of Bitcoin.
The Gold Record
Today, the price of gold has reached a new all-time high, nearing for the first time in its history $4,800 per ounce.
The curious thing is that just seven days ago it had never exceeded $4,000.
It has practically risen by 7% since the beginning of October, and even by 24% since the second half of August.
Although these are very small percentages compared to the norm of Bitcoin, for gold they are actual records.
Just consider that $3,500 per ounce was surpassed for the first time in history only last month, and that the great bull run of gold started at the end of 2023 from about $1,800 per ounce.
The $2,000 mark was surpassed for the first time in November 2023, while the $3,000 mark was reached in March of this year.
In other words, in about two years it gained 111%, a stratospheric percentage for gold’s habits.
Bitcoin suffers
Bitcoin instead has returned to slight suffering.
After Friday’s crash, which for a brief moment brought it well below $110,000, yesterday it had recovered to $115,000, only to drop back down today to $111,000. Now it has slightly risen to $112,000, but it’s unlikely to stay there for long.
However, the main issue seems to be the strength of the dollar, with the Dollar Index rising today to 99.4 points.
In fact, last Thursday the DXY had also risen to 99.5 points, and indeed the following day the mini-mini-bubble of BTC that had started to inflate on the first of October could no longer hold.
Yesterday, the Dollar Index had fallen below 99 points, allowing a timid rebound of Bitcoin, but today as it rises again, it has pushed BTC back down.
Note that this dynamic has actually been in place for ten days, namely a Dollar Index that continues to rise. Bitcoin had tried to hold on, so much so that on October 6 it recorded new all-time highs despite the rise of DXY having already slightly begun.
The problem is that since October 7, the rise of the Dollar Index has accelerated, causing the upward movement of BTC to end, and eventually triggering the correction.
This correction theoretically should still be underway, also because there seems to be the possibility that the price of Bitcoin could end up falling well below $110,000 again.