Gold and silver have seen astonishing gains these days, even grandmothers are starting to buy gold bars. In contrast, Bitcoin appears quite ordinary, and many people's mindset is collapsing, even considering whether to switch tracks. But is that really the case? Wake up, this might just be the "trap" set by the main players to lure in short sellers.
Don't be fooled by surface phenomena. What do the explosive rises of gold and silver fundamentally tell us? The whole world is starting to fear. Fiat currencies are continuously depreciating, and purchasing power is shrinking. At this moment, global investors are searching for a reliable store of value to protect their assets. Gold is doing one thing for Bitcoin—it is giving the global market a compulsory lesson on "hard currency."
This is not the end for Bitcoin; it is the prelude to a major market trend. Gold is not an enemy of Bitcoin; rather, it is more like its most effective "promoter." Why do I say that?
A very practical issue is that when funds start flowing into gold, investors will gradually realize its limitations—it's too heavy, hard to transport, and difficult to divide. Once these pain points are amplified, people's attention will naturally shift to a more elegant choice: a digital asset that settles instantly worldwide, is truly scarce, and has no regional restrictions.
Gold is fueling the big theme of "anti-inflation," while Bitcoin is waiting for this concept to become fully widespread. Once global consensus is formed, the relay race of liquidity will truly begin. The current consolidation is precisely building up energy. The higher the ceiling for gold, the greater the space for Bitcoin to take off—this is not a guess; it is the market's inherent logic.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ChainPoet
· 12h ago
Gold paves the way for Bitcoin; only when the entire population awakens will the liquidity relay race truly begin.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleWatcher
· 12h ago
Gold is paving the way for Bitcoin; only after the concept becomes widespread will liquidity truly follow. Right now, it's the energy accumulation phase.
View OriginalReply0
gas_fee_therapy
· 12h ago
The trap of trapping short-sellers has been heard too many times. Every time, it's said that the main force is deceiving, but what’s the result? Still a mess of broken feathers.
When gold prices rise, crypto enthusiasts start making up stories, talking about promoters and foreplay. These are just excuses for losing. If it were really going to take off, it would have already, no need to wait.
What does grandma grabbing gold bars indicate? It shows that people simply don't believe your story.
View OriginalReply0
CompoundPersonality
· 12h ago
Gold paves the way for BTC, I like this logic. When people realize they can't transfer gold bars, it'll be our turn.
Gold and silver have seen astonishing gains these days, even grandmothers are starting to buy gold bars. In contrast, Bitcoin appears quite ordinary, and many people's mindset is collapsing, even considering whether to switch tracks. But is that really the case? Wake up, this might just be the "trap" set by the main players to lure in short sellers.
Don't be fooled by surface phenomena. What do the explosive rises of gold and silver fundamentally tell us? The whole world is starting to fear. Fiat currencies are continuously depreciating, and purchasing power is shrinking. At this moment, global investors are searching for a reliable store of value to protect their assets. Gold is doing one thing for Bitcoin—it is giving the global market a compulsory lesson on "hard currency."
This is not the end for Bitcoin; it is the prelude to a major market trend. Gold is not an enemy of Bitcoin; rather, it is more like its most effective "promoter." Why do I say that?
A very practical issue is that when funds start flowing into gold, investors will gradually realize its limitations—it's too heavy, hard to transport, and difficult to divide. Once these pain points are amplified, people's attention will naturally shift to a more elegant choice: a digital asset that settles instantly worldwide, is truly scarce, and has no regional restrictions.
Gold is fueling the big theme of "anti-inflation," while Bitcoin is waiting for this concept to become fully widespread. Once global consensus is formed, the relay race of liquidity will truly begin. The current consolidation is precisely building up energy. The higher the ceiling for gold, the greater the space for Bitcoin to take off—this is not a guess; it is the market's inherent logic.