The crypto market has been through a bruising few weeks. Bitcoin tumbled from its October highs, and the wider crypto complex saw about $1.2 trillion of market value erased since early October. This has left many investors wondering whether the shock could push money into traditional safe havens, most notably gold. With bitcoin trading well below recent peaks and gold near multi-year highs, the question now is whether the crash in digital assets will give a fresh leg up to bullion.
How Big Was The Crypto Sell-Off, And Where Is Bitcoin Now? The recent sell-off in crypto was large and fast. The market has wiped out around $1.2 trillion over the past six weeks as bitcoin fell sharply from its 2025 peak. Bitcoin slid to seven-month lows during and after the drop, trading in the low-to-mid ~$89,000 range at several points in mid-to-late November. That sharp move forced liquidations and amplified selling pressure across altcoins and tokenised assets.
For investors, the key takeaways are clear: a big fall in crypto wealth can trigger forced selling, margin calls, and cash needs, all of which usually depress risk appetite. The crucial question now is whether investors will redirect their cash into gold, which is traditionally seen as a safe store of value during market stress.
Gold’s price has been strong this month. Reuters reported gold at about $4,141.49 per ounce on 25 November, as markets increasingly priced in a likely Fed rate cut in December, a factor that lowers the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like gold. Several price feeds show spot gold in the $4,120–$4,150/oz range in late-November trade. A softer dollar and falling real yields make bullion comparatively more attractive.
Besides the rise in prices, the actions of large investors also show what’s happening. Central bank purchases and ETF inflows earlier in 2025 helped support prices, and analysts at major banks have raised their forecasts this year amid concerns over geopolitics and trade friction. HSBC, for instance, raised its 2025 gold forecasts earlier in the year citing these tail risks. If investors shift part of their crypto exposure into gold-backed ETFs or physical bullion, that could support further gains.
There are practical mechanics to consider. Why might capital move into gold?
Similar role, different risk: Some crypto investors view bitcoin as a digital store of value like “digital gold”. When bitcoin’s price collapses, a portion of cautious investors may prefer physical or gold ETFs for lower volatility and regulatory clarity.
Macro drivers align: Expectations of Fed easing and a weaker dollar favour gold. If rate-cut bets grow, the relative appeal of bullion rises versus yield instruments and volatile cryptos.
But, there are reasons the flow might be limited:
Different investor bases: A meaningful share of crypto holders are speculative, short-term traders. In a sell-off, many of them may simply stay out of the market rather than reallocating into gold. On the institutional side, large gold ETF holders are often long-term investors who may already have their allocations in place, which limits the scope for significant new buying from that segment.
Liquidity and speed: Converting crypto to fiat and then into bullion takes operational steps and time. During liquidations, forced sellers usually move into cash quickly to meet margin calls, rather than shifting into alternative assets right away.
Relative returns: If crypto recovers quickly, money that fled might return to risk assets rather than stay parked in gold. On the other hand, a prolonged bear market could push more investors toward safe-haven assets.
The scale of the crypto wipeout, roughly $1.2 trillion since October, and Bitcoin’s fall into the low-to-mid ~$89,000 range have unsettled many investors. Gold, meanwhile, is trading near multi-year highs (around $4,100–$4,150/oz), supported by growing rate-cut bets and safe-haven interest.
Whether the crypto crash triggers a fresh and sustained leg higher for bullion will depend on who is selling crypto, how quickly that cash is redeployed, and whether macro policy (especially the Federal Reserve’s actions and the dollar’s direction) continues to favour gold. The key question now is whether this episode leads to a lasting shift from crypto into gold, or if capital will move back to risk assets once market turbulence settles.
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