Bitcoin Smashes Gold: $123K Breakout Crowns It 2025’s Ultimate Asset
Move over, gold—Bitcoin just stole the throne. The digital asset surged past $123,000 this week, leaving traditional safe havens in the dust. Here’s why the flippening finally happened.
The new inflation hedge in town
With institutional adoption hitting warp speed and ETFs gobbling up supply, Bitcoin’s scarcity play is trumping millennia of shiny-rock sentiment. Gold bugs? Still waiting for that hyperinflation payoff.
Liquidity eats tradition for breakfast
24/7 markets, instant settlements, and a generation that trusts code more than central banks—legacy assets never stood a chance. (But sure, keep stacking those sovereign bonds.)
The king is dead. Long live the king.

Bitcoin has officially taken the top spot this year, climbing past $123,000 and logging its highest-ever weekly close at $119,500. With a 30% gain so far in 2025, it has now outperformed gold, which is up around 27%.
That’s a big moment for crypto. But it’s also raising some serious questions.
According to Charlie Bilello, Chief Market Strategist at Creative Planning, this is the first time Bitcoin and gold are the top two assets in any calendar year. “We’ve never seen these two in the number one and number two spots,” he noted.
When bitcoin and gold lead the markets, it usually means something else is going on.
A $15K Jump Since July 3: What Triggered It?
Bitcoin’s latest rally started after the U.S. passed the “big beautiful bill” on July 3, adding nearly $15,000 to its price in just days.
But the real driver behind this MOVE is deeper. Investors are reacting to a mix of high U.S. interest rates, a weakening dollar, delayed tariffs, and rising geopolitical tensions.
In the last six months:
- The dollar index (DXY) dropped by 11%
- The U.S. deficit hit a record $316 billion in May
- And tensions with countries like Iran have led to fresh military strikes
It’s not a classic bull run. It’s what some are calling “crisis mode.” That’s how The Kobeissi Letter described it and the signs seem to back that up.
What Bitcoin and Gold’s Rise Says About the Economy
Both Bitcoin and Gold are considered unproductive assets – meaning they don’t generate income like stocks or real estate. When these assets outperform, it often reflects fear, not confidence.
Bilello pointed out that this kind of rally doesn’t usually happen in a strong economy. Instead, it shows that investors are pulling out of traditional markets and moving their money somewhere safer.
Bitcoin or Gold? Here’s Where Investors Are Turning Now
Bitcoin has often been compared to gold with strong arguments made for both. Now, Bitcoin seems to be performing better and becoming the go-to choice in times of uncertainty.
But here’s the key takeaway: both are rising because people are worried. That’s the signal behind the surge. And right now, that picture shows investors preparing for more rough weather ahead.