Bitcoin Price Slides As Investors Treat 'Digital Gold' Like An ATM During Global Turmoil

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When markets turn ugly, you would expect so‑called ‘digital gold’ to shine. Instead, Bitcoin has been quietly bleeding, sold off by the very investors who once hailed it as a safe haven in times of crisis. As geopolitical tensions spike and volatility rips through global markets, fresh data suggests the Bitcoin price is behaving less like a store of value – and more like a convenient cash machine.

Over the past week, as fears mounted over Donald Trump‘s threats of tariffs against Nato allies over Greenland and speculation swirled about possible military action in the Arctic, traditional risk assets pulled back. In theory, this should have been Bitcoin’s moment. In practice, it has exposed an uncomfortable truth about how the market actually treats the cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin Price Safe-Haven Myth Exposed In Market Turmoil

Since 18 January, the day Trump first floated tariffs tied to his Greenland ambitions, Bitcoin has lost 6.6% of its value. Over the same period, gold has climbed 8.6%, surging to fresh highs near $5,000. That divergence – Bitcoin down, bullion up – is the clearest sign yet that, in real‑world stress, investors still trust metal over code.

The gap is not just about price, but about how each asset fits into portfolios when nerves are frayed. Bitcoin trades 24/7, settles instantly and enjoys deep liquidity across exchanges. Those very strengths make it an easy line to cut when investors need to raise cash in a hurry.

Gold, by contrast, is clunkier to move and typically sits in vaults, ETFs or longer‑term holdings. It tends not to be the first thing sold to plug a short‑term hole. As Francisco Rodrigues notes, Bitcoin is increasingly behaving like an ‘ATM’ during moments of panic: the quickest asset to tap for liquidity, rather than the one you cling to for safety.

Greg Cipolaro, NYDIG’s Global Head of Research, argues this dynamic is now firmly entrenched. ‘Under periods of stress and uncertainty, liquidity preference dominates, and this dynamic hurts bitcoin far more than gold,’ he wrote. ‘Despite being liquid for its size, bitcoin remains more volatile and reflexively sold as leverage is unwound. As a result, in risk-off environments, it is frequently used to raise cash, reduce VAR, and de-risk portfolios regardless of its long-term narrative, while gold continues to function as a true liquidity sink,’ he added.

In other words, whatever the long‑term story about censorship‑resistant, sound money, the short‑term reality is that traders still treat Bitcoin as a line item to cut when they are de‑risking.

Bitcoin Price Under Pressure As Investors Use ‘Digital Gold’ Like An ATM

Large holders are amplifying the pressure. Central banks, which control enormous pools of capital, have been buying gold at record levels, creating a powerful base of structural demand. Those institutions are not in the Bitcoin market. Instead, on‑chain data shows older ‘vintage’ coins continue to move towards exchanges, signalling that long‑term holders are selling into rallies or using strength to exit entirely.

That steady stream of supply – a ‘seller overhang’ in market jargon – dampens the Bitcoin price just when it might otherwise be expected to benefit from macro fears. ‘The opposite dynamic is playing out in gold. Large holders, particularly central banks, continue to accumulate the metal,’ Cipolaro added.

There is also a deeper mismatch between the kind of risks markets are currently worried about and the hedge Bitcoin is best suited to provide. Much of the present turbulence is seen as episodic: tariffs, policy threats, sabre‑rattling and other short‑term shocks that may roil markets, but do not yet amount to a full‑blown systemic break.

Gold has long been the go‑to hedge for precisely that sort of immediate uncertainty. ‘Gold excels in moments of immediate confidence loss, war risk, and fiat debasement that does not involve a full system break,’ Cipolaro wrote. It is the asset investors reach for when they fear a bad few months or years, not the total collapse of the monetary order.

Bitcoin, by contrast, is structurally better suited to hedging ‘long-run monetary and geopolitical disorder and slow-moving trust erosion that unfolds over years, not weeks’. It is designed as insurance against the grinding debasement of fiat currencies, spiralling sovereign debt crises and deep, structural loss of faith in traditional institutions.

For now, though, markets appear to believe that today’s risks are ‘dangerous but not yet foundational.’ That judgment keeps gold firmly in the driving seat as the preferred hedge, while Bitcoin is relegated to a source of emergency liquidity. Until that perception shifts – or until a crisis arrives that looks existential rather than episodic – ‘digital gold’ may continue to act less like a vault, and more like an ATM.