Bitcoin is not acting like “digital gold” because real gold and USD correlations collapsed toward zero

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In 2025 and early 2026, Bitcoin’s behavior has been less “digital gold” and more regime-dependent. Sometimes it trades like a tech beta, then like a rates-and-liquidity-duration trade, and only intermittently like a hedge.

The real story is which macro regime makes which identity dominate next.

The setup matters. The Federal Reserve held the Fed funds target range at 3.5% to 3.75% on Jan. 28, reinforcing a “watch incoming data” stance rather than a clean easing tailwind.

The IMF’s January 2026 update projects 3.3% global growth in 2026, with “technology investment and accommodative financial conditions” offsetting trade headwinds, an environment that tends to keep equity and tech risk factors relevant.

Against that backdrop, Bitcoin’s correlations indicate which identity is prevailing.

CME Group notes that crypto’s correlation with the Nasdaq 100 in 2025 and early 2026 has been as strong as +0.35 to +0.6, whereas Bitcoin’s correlations with gold and the US dollar have weakened to roughly zero in recent years.

That’s a shift from 2022 and 2023, when Bitcoin’s negative correlation with the US dollar reached about –0.4. In this regime, Bitcoin trades less like a macro hedge and more like a liquidity-sensitive tech risk factor.

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Three identities, and when does Bitcoin behave like each one of them

Hedge means that Bitcoin should benefit when the dollar weakens or when investors seek a store-of-value hedge with gold-like characteristics.

High-beta tech refers to Bitcoin’s behavior as a leveraged cousin of the Nasdaq 100 on risk-on and risk-off days.

Liquidity sponge means Bitcoin absorbs and reflects changes in financial plumbing, such as ETF flow reversals, funding conditions, reserves and cash facilities, acting like the first asset repriced when liquidity tightens or loosens.

The piece is evergreen if you treat these as three identities that Bitcoin rotates among, rather than one “true” identity. The rotation depends on the macro regime, which is measurable.

The “digital gold” claim has been weaker recently. CME’s framing is direct: Bitcoin’s rolling correlation with gold has never been very high, peaking at +0.41 on a rolling 12-month basis during the quantitative easing era, and has been near zero since 2024.

Bitcoin’s negative dollar correlation, which reached about -0.4 in 2022 and 2023, has also weakened toward zero by 2025 and early 2026.

The hedge identity isn’t dead, but it’s dormant. In the current regime, Bitcoin doesn’t decouple from the dollar when the dollar weakens, and it doesn’t track gold’s moves.

For the high-beta tech, the evidence is strongest. CME notes crypto has shown a consistently positive relationship with the Nasdaq 100 since 2020, and in 2025 and early 2026 it’s often in the +0.35 to +0.6 range.

In “AI-risk-on and risk-off” days, Bitcoin trades like an equity risk factor, often falling more than tech on selloffs. High beta cuts both ways: Bitcoin amplifies Nasdaq gains on the way up and magnifies losses on the way down.

This is the identity that predominates when growth holds, and financial conditions remain supportive.

For the liquidity sponge personality, rates can be flat while liquidity still moves. BlackRock argues that Bitcoin has historically shown sensitivity to dollar real rates, similar to gold and emerging-market foreign exchange.

As a result, “slower cuts or higher real yields” can pressure Bitcoin even if no new policy shock lands. FRED provides clean public series to anchor “plumbing”: the Fed balance sheet and reverse repo facility usage.

Bitcoin can behave like a liquidity sponge when the marginal buyer or seller is flow-driven, regardless of the headline policy rate.

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Scenarios and what to watch

While Bitcoin struggles to decide which identity it will assume, different scenarios are possible.
The first is “risk-on tech beta,” which serves as the base case if growth holds and financial conditions remain supportive.

Bitcoin’s identity would be high-beta tech dominance if its rolling correlation with Nasdaq stays elevated in the +0.35 to +0.6 regime. Additionally, correlations with gold and the dollar remain weak, at approximately zero.

Bitcoin isn’t hedging, but participating in the same risk complex as tech equities.

The second scenario is “sticky inflation and higher real yields,” which assumes the policy rate remains steady while real yields rise.

Bitcoin’s identity would shift to liquidity and real-rate duration trade, with higher real rates and tighter financial conditions coinciding with Bitcoin drawdowns.

Reverse repo and other plumbing proxies show tighter reserve and liquidity conditions. Bitcoin sells off like a long-duration asset when the discount rate rises, even if nominal rates don’t move much.

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