Bitcoin ‘decoupling’ galvanises crypto backers as price outperforms gold and tech

Bitcoin ‘decoupling’ galvanises crypto backers as price outperforms gold and tech
Markets
A long-term divergence from traditional equities would be a major turning point for Bitcoin. Illustration: Gwen P
  • The month of April was good for Bitcoin and gold.
  • Stocks had it much rougher due to Trump’s tariffs.

It was a big month for decoupling — a term for Bitcoin’s divergence from tech stocks’ performance.

The trend matters to Bitcoin backers because it’s a sign that the cryptocurrency is starting to act not as a risky asset like equities, but more like gold, as a haven in times of turmoil.

In April, Bitcoin was up 13%, outperforming gold, which gained 7.5%.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq, meanwhile, has been flat.

Analysts have noticed the shift.

“Big boy institutions are waiting for [Bitcoin] to behave like a safe haven,” Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Eric Balchunas tweeted. “When it does, look out.”

US President Donald Trump’s tempestuous tariff regime — which began on April 2 — caused chaos in markets and led investors to question the primacy of the dollar.

The dollar slumped 4.3% in April.

The turmoil has left investors searching for an alternative to US dollars and US debt. Bitcoin is seen as a beneficiary.

Bitcoin’s market outperformance relative to the Nasdaq throughout the US’s tariff crisis this year has been “striking,” said Bernstein analysts in a note to investors this month.

David Lawant, head of research at FalconX, highlighted Bitcoin’s “low beta,” or volatility, throughout April, in an interview with Bloomberg.

Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise, wrote on Tuesday that he expects wirehouses — enormous, full-service financial firms like Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, and UBS — to allow their customers access to Bitcoin exchange-traded funds this year.

“It’s one of the reasons I still expect bitcoin ETFs to set a new record for net inflows this year, despite pulling in ‘just’ $3.7 billion so far in 2025, compared to $35 billion in 2024,” wrote Hougan.

In a Monday note, Geoff Kendrick, global head of digital assets research at UK bank Standard Chartered, wrote that a confluence of factors could be driving the Bitcoin-as-digital-gold narrative to the fore and Bitcoin to new highs.

“Analysis suggests US investors themselves are divesting out of US assets,” Kendrick wrote.

“Whales are accumulating, flows out of gold ETFs and into BTC ETFs have started.”

Kendrick predicted a price of $120,000 per coin in the second quarter of this year.

Andrew Flanagan is a markets correspondent for DL News. Have a tip? Reach out to aflanagan@dlnews.com.

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