Record highs for bitcoin and gold are sending mixed messages about the appetite for risk across global markets.
The twin peaks for the cryptocurrency and the precious metal mark the first simultaneous records for the two since bitcoin emerged from the shadows more than a decade ago. Yet markedly different drivers are typically thought to move each asset — gold has acted as a haven store of value for millennia, while anybBitcoin role beyond pure speculation is hotly contested.
Bitcoin has jumped almost 50% this year, helped by inflows into recently minted US exchange-traded funds that hold the digital currency directly. Gold’s rise, however, could be taken to indicate defensive positioning on concerns about the perils of geopolitical tension or a possible pullback in global stocks in the wake of a record-breaking run.
One way to square the circle is to consider the behavior of traders who chase short-term momentum across asset classes, said Chris Weston, head of research for Pepperstone Group Ltd.
“Gold has been hugely traded overnight, the volumes are massive — I’ve had a lot of client calls asking what is happening,” he said. Fast-money investors “are buying the momentum and that is what we are seeing in bitcoin as well.”
Both bitcoin and gold are viewed as beneficiaries of expectations of looser monetary policy. Swaps markets show a 62% chance of a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut in June, compared with 58% at the end of February.
Bitcoin surged to a record $69,191.95 on Tuesday in the US — scaling the peak the token reached in November 2021 during the pandemic — before retreating to trade at around $63,300 as of noon Wednesday in Singapore.
Bullion rose to a peak of $2,141.79 an ounce on Tuesday, surpassing the
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