Bitcoin & Gold: The Unlikely Power Duo Redefining Safe Havens in 2025
Move over, traditional hedges—Bitcoin and gold are forming a volatility-resistant alliance that's shaking up the portfolio playbook.
The new rules of risk-off
WisdomTree's latest analysis reveals these historically divergent assets now move in eerie sync during market chaos. Gold's 5,000-year track record meets Bitcoin's algorithmic scarcity—and Wall Street's scrambling to adjust models.
Why institutions can't look away
With central banks still printing like it's 2020, both assets are soaking up institutional flows. Bitcoin's 24/7 trading now complements gold's London fixes, creating a liquidity moat against black swans.
The cynical take
Of course, this all works until some Fed governor tweets about 'digital gold 2.0'—then watch both charts flash-crash in perfect harmony. Such is modern finance: where narratives move faster than fundamentals.
Gold vs. Bitcoin: A Changing Store-of-Value Hierarchy
Gold’s safe-haven characteristics remain structurally intact. Its scarcity, established role in global markets and historical performance during periods of stress have kept it resilient.
Since 2013, Gold posted annualised returns of 10.4% with 14.5% volatility, delivering a Sharpe ratio of 0.6, according to Silenskyte’s analysis.

Bitcoin, however, has shifted the paradigm. Over the same period, it generated annualised returns of 50.5% with 67.0% volatility, resulting in a Sharpe ratio of 0.7 — marginally outperforming gold on a risk-adjusted basis despite its extreme swings.
On the Sortino ratio, which focuses on downside risk, the gap is even wider: 1.0 for bitcoin versus 0.3 for gold. In simple terms, bitcoin has historically compensated investors more efficiently for the risk taken.
“Even with high volatility, bitcoin has offered superior risk-adjusted returns,” Silenskyte notes.
Bitcoin Volatility: From Barrier to Manageable Risk
Bitcoin’s volatility is frequently cited as the primary reason some investors remain hesitant. Yet Silenskyte’s research shows that this volatility has declined significantly over the past decade. Its 90-day annualised volatility has compressed from above 150% to under 40%, putting it within range of several commodities.
At the same time, liquidity has deepened, with daily spot volumes comparable to major S&P 500 equities. Derivatives markets — particularly futures and options — provide sophisticated hedging tools that make volatility increasingly manageable for institutional allocators.
“Volatility is a tax, but a declining one,” Silenskyte says.
Macro Conditions Favour a Combined Allocation
Rather than competing, bitcoin and gold appear to hedge different types of macro risk. Gold thrives during inflation, geopolitical turmoil and periods of negative real yields. Bitcoin, with its 21-million-supply cap and decentralised issuance, serves as a hedge against fiat debasement and technological disruption.
Importantly, bitcoin and gold display a low long-term correlation of just 6%, according to WisdomTree. This gives them powerful diversification properties: gold anchors the defensive side of a portfolio, while bitcoin provides convex upside driven by digital adoption.
Portfolio Implications: Not Either-Or, but Both
WisdomTree’s modelling shows that adding even 1% bitcoin to a traditional 60/40 portfolio can increase the Sharpe ratio by 0.06, with only a marginal change in maximum drawdowns.
The takeaway from Silenskyte’s research is clear: gold remains foundational, but bitcoin enhances the opportunity set. As digital assets mature, the case for treating the two as complementary hedges — not rivals — becomes stronger.
Together, they broaden the safe-haven spectrum for the modern investor.