
Over the last week, both Bitcoin and gold failed the safe-haven test. Bitcoin is still trading more like a risk asset than “digital gold,” while gold has also failed to behave like a clean geopolitical hedge as higher yields and inflation fears overrode the usual flight-to-safety bid.
To start the week, Bitcoin rebounded to about $70,508 after falling as low as $67,436 earlier in the day, while gold was still trying to recover from a far steeper break, and the US 10-year Treasury yield remained above its Friday close after briefly pushing to a new high.
That sequence changed the usual reading of a geopolitical shock. Investors did not rush cleanly into classic hedges. They sold first, repriced inflation and rates, and only then bought back some risk after comments about “productive” talks with Iran and a five-day pause in strikes eased immediate panic.
The last three sessions broke into three distinct phases.
Friday was an inflation and yield repricing. Bitcoin hovered near $70,272 after the prior day’s drop below $69,000, linked to higher-for-longer Fed expectations and energy-driven inflation pressure.
Over the weekend, escalating US-Iran tensions pushed Bitcoin back toward $68,000, wiping out more than $240 million in long positions.
Monday then brought a relief reversal. Bitcoin traded in a wide intraday band from $67,436 to $71,696 before climbing back above $70,000, tied to the market’s reading of Trump’s de-escalation statement.
Gold followed the same broad rhythm, though with heavier damage
Barron’s coverage showed New York futures up about 1.7% to $4,682.20 early Friday, yet still headed for a weekly loss of more than 7%, with front-month futures ending the week near $4,570.40.
Today, gold is down toward roughly $4,100 to $4,260 intraday as the market focuses on the inflation and yield shock coming from oil.
Gold is not acting as a clean geopolitical hedge; it’s trading like an asset caught between forced selling, higher real-rate expectations, and opportunistic buying.
The macro hinge has stayed in rates. The 10-year Treasury yield was around 4.30% on Friday as oil strength and fading rate-cut hopes pushed yields higher.
Today, the 10-year hit 4.43%, the highest level since mid-2025. After the Iran-talks headline, yields fell to about 4.31% before settling near 4.386%. The inflation premium eased, but it did not disappear.
PeriodBitcoinGoldUS 10-year yieldMarket readFriday, March 20Near $70,272 after stabilizing from a dip below $69,000Early futures near $4,682.20, week ended near $4,570.40Around 4.30%Inflation and yield repricingWeekendDown toward $68,000 as long liquidations hitPressure carried into Monday openPressure building into MondayGeopolitical risk-offMonday, March 23Range of $67,436 to $71,696, now around $70,508Down toward $4,100 to $4,260 intraday, later around $4,286.10, with one rebound measure near $4,500High near 4.423% to 4.437%, later around 4.36% to 4.386%Relief reversal after de-escalation comments
Flows show where investors looked for liquidity
The price action alone was enough to weaken the old “digital gold” line. US spot Bitcoin ETFs finished the March 16 to March 20 stretch in positive territory, but the direction turned worse as the week went on.
The daily flow table shows net inflows of $199.4 million on March 16 and another $199.4 million on March 17, then net outflows of $163.5 million on March 18, $90.2 million on March 19, and $52.0 million on March 20. That left the week net positive by about $93.1 million, yet the pattern was one of weakening demand, not strong accumulation.
That distinction helps with the Bitcoin framing. ETF buyers did not vanish. Buying slowed, then reversed, as macro pressure returned and Bitcoin lost momentum into the weekend.
Monday’s recovery above $70,000 improved the immediate picture, but it did not erase the sequence that came before it.
Bitcoin is still trading primarily as a high-beta macro asset, with any hedge behavior showing up only in short bursts.
Gold ETF flows were weaker. The cleanest indexed US data for last week points to a cluster of heavy withdrawals from the largest gold funds.
ETF.com reported IAU outflows of $554.66 million on March 17, while commodity ETFs as a whole lost $735.29 million that day.
On March 18, ETF.com reported GLD outflows of $414 million and IAU outflows of $387 million. On March 19, GLD outflows were $760 million, and IAU outflows were $329 million.
That makes gold the more revealing asset in this stretch. Bitcoin bent, then recovered, and Bitcoin ETF flows for the week still ended slightly positive. Gold took deeper price damage and saw large holders redeeming through the break.
Investors appeared to use gold ETFs as a source of liquidity instead of treating them as a preferred refuge. That is a meaningful shift because gold normally carries the stronger default claim as a haven during geopolitical stress.
The broader context still matters. Global gold ETFs took in $5.3 billion in February and lifted holdings to a record 4,171 tonnes. That tells you the US outflow week did not arrive after a long period of persistent global liquidation.
After a strong prior backdrop, the reversal is even more striking. In other words, the selling pressure was strong enough to overwhelm a market that had just logged nine straight months of global inflows.
ETF flow signalLatest readingWhat it suggestsBTC ETFs, March 16+$199 millionStrong demand at the start of the weekBTC ETFs, March 17+$199 millionDemand still firm before the macro turn intensifiedBTC ETFs, March 18-$163 millionReversal as macro pressure returnedBTC ETFs, March 19-$90 millionOutflows continuedBTC ETFs, March 20-$52 millionThird straight outflow day into the weekendGold ETFs, March 17 to 19Large GLD and IAU withdrawals across three sessionsInvestors raised cash and reduced exposure
The next move still runs through yields, oil, and expectations
Monday’s bounce changed the direction of travel, but it did not change the hierarchy of drivers.
The market still looks more sensitive to oil, inflation expectations, and rate pricing than to the old safe-haven labels attached to either asset.
The University of Michigan’s early-March chart showed short-run inflation expectations rising from about 3.3% to 3.5% and long-run expectations rising from about 3.1% to 3.3%, with one-year gasoline price expectations jumping from about 10 cents to about 43 cents. Those moves help explain why the inflation premium in yields stayed elevated even after Monday’s relief reversal.
The Fed’s March projections still point to only modest easing, with the median end-2026 fed-funds rate at 3.4% against a 2025 midpoint near 3.6%. That leaves little room for a fast return to the kind of falling-real-yield backdrop that usually flatters both gold and Bitcoin.
The market can absorb one encouraging geopolitical headline and still keep a higher bar for non-yielding assets if inflation risk remains embedded in energy and rates.
Oil sits at the center of that calculation. The latest EIA outlook said Brent should stay above $95 for the next two months before falling below $80 in the third quarter and toward $70 by year-end, assuming disruptions ease.
If that path holds, the pressure on real yields can cool and the current selloff in hedges can look like a short-lived dislocation. If oil stays higher for longer, the Monday rebound in both gold and Bitcoin will look more like a relief trade than the start of a durable turn.
Published outlooks still give both assets room to recover, though the ranges are wide. A 2026 gold outlook showed a gain of 5% to 15% in a shallow-slip case and 15% to 30% in a deeper risk scenario, while a reflation case pointed to a decline of 5% to 20%.
In crypto, an Investing.com report said Citi cut its 12-month Bitcoin target to $112,000 because it expects weaker ETF-driven demand and slower progress on US crypto legislation, while Standard Chartered warned Bitcoin could fall to $50,000 before recovering.
Those ranges fit the current market structure. Downside still runs through yields. Upside still runs through calmer energy markets, steadier inflation readings, and renewed ETF demand.
Narrower projection than the old “digital gold” debate usually allows
Gold and Bitcoin both lost ground when the market marked up the return available in yield-bearing assets and questioned how quickly inflation would fade.
Monday’s rebound showed that both can still snap back when fear eases. It also showed that traders were responding to the prospect of de-escalation, not restoring either asset to automatic safe-haven status.
For the next quarter, the cleanest checkpoints are visible already.
The 10-year Treasury yield needs to stop pushing higher. Oil needs to move toward the lower path sketched by the EIA outlook.
Bitcoin ETF flows need to move from three straight outflow sessions back toward sustained creations. Gold needs to hold a rebound without another round of heavy GLD and IAU withdrawals.
Until those things happen, the market is still saying the same thing it said from Friday through Monday, cash flow and explicit yield rank above narrative when inflation risk is rising.




