Gold, silver and bitcoin are tumbling in unison as markets price out the debasement narrative that drove 2025's biggest macro trade.
Bitcoin fell to $61,557, gold dropped below $4,000 an ounce and silver slumped more than 50% from its record as markets priced in two Federal Reserve rate hikes by March 2027. The coordinated sell-off has erased hundreds of billions in market value from assets that investors had piled into as hedges against fiat currency debasement.
"The debasement trade is unwinding because the macro catalyst that drove it — expectations of persistent fiscal-driven inflation and dollar weakness — has been directly challenged by Kevin Warsh's nomination," said Nina Volkov, macro analyst at Edgen.
The reversal marks a dramatic break from 2025, when gold surged more than 60% in its strongest annual performance since the late 1970s, peaking at $5,600 an ounce in January. Silver hit a record near $120. Bitcoin reached an all-time high above $120,000 in October before sliding 50% to current levels. Markets now see the federal funds rate rising to 4.00%-4.25% by March 2027, according to CME FedWatch data, after President Donald Trump nominated Warsh to lead the Fed on Jan. 30 — a day that saw gold tumble 13% from its peak in a single session.
The coordinated liquidation across three assets that investors had piled into as hedges against currency debasement raises questions about which, if any, still function as portfolio insurance. Bitcoin has outperformed both precious metals since February — gaining roughly 30% against gold and 55% against silver — but remains below its 200-week moving average of approximately $62,800, a level that has historically marked bear market territory.
The Warsh Effect
Warsh's nomination on Jan. 30 is increasingly viewed as the inflection point for the debasement trade. The former Fed governor, known for his hawkish views on inflation, signaled a shift toward tighter monetary policy that directly contradicted the narrative of persistent dollar erosion that had fueled gold and bitcoin demand. The dollar found a bottom after a prolonged slide, while gold suffered its steepest single-day decline in more than four decades.
The policy repricing accelerated in June as inflation data came in hotter than expected. Markets are now pricing two quarter-point rate increases by March 2027, a stark reversal from the rate-cut expectations that dominated early 2025. The shift has hit all three assets, but the mechanism differs: gold is losing its structural demand floor as real yields rise, while bitcoin is being sold as a risk asset in a liquidity-driven unwind.
Bitcoin vs. Gold — A Divergence in Practice
The 2026 sell-off has provided the clearest empirical test yet of bitcoin's claim to be a safe haven alongside gold. During the Iran conflict that began on Feb. 27, gold surged 5.2% in the first 48 hours while bitcoin fell 12%. Over the following weeks, gold stabilized around $4,700 an ounce as central banks continued buying, while bitcoin declined to a low near $72,000 — a 35% drawdown from its 2025 highs — trading in lockstep with the Nasdaq and S&P 500.
The 1-year rolling correlation between gold and bitcoin dropped to negative 0.17 by February, according to data cited by VaasBlock, implying the two assets are now moving in opposite directions rather than as paired hedges. Central bank gold purchases reached 244 tonnes in Q1 2026 alone, up 2% from the prior year, with a record market value of $193 billion, according to the World Gold Council. Bitcoin has no equivalent sovereign demand floor.
For bitcoin, the path forward depends on whether its institutional ownership base matures beyond the speculative ETF inflows of 2024 and 2025. The cryptocurrency is now trading below its 200-week moving average for the first time since the 2022 bear market, a technical level that CryptoQuant and other on-chain analysts have flagged as a potential trigger for further selling. The next major support sits near $55,000, according to 10x Research.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.