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Just saw JPMorgan's latest take on bitcoin and it's actually pretty interesting. While gold went absolutely nuts in 2025 with over 60% gains, bitcoin has been struggling into 2026 with repeated monthly declines. On the surface it looks like bitcoin's losing its safe-haven appeal, but the analysts are making a case that might flip this narrative.
The core observation is about volatility. Gold has been outperforming bitcoin since October but with way sharper swings. JPMorgan's point is that bitcoin's lower volatility relative to gold actually makes it potentially more attractive long-term as a hedge. Think about it this way: if bitcoin matched gold's recent volatility levels, the price would theoretically need to hit around $266k to match the capital flowing into gold. Obviously that's not happening anytime soon, but it illustrates something.
What's driving the current weakness though is pretty straightforward. Digital assets got hit hard as tech sold off and investors rotated into traditional hedges like gold and silver. The selling spilled over into spot bitcoin and ether ETFs, showing both institutional and retail players are spooked right now. Even stablecoin supply contracted, which tells you something about market sentiment.
But here's where it gets interesting for the longer view. JPMorgan argues that once negative sentiment clears and bitcoin regains credibility as a potential hedge against major market disruptions, its relatively low volatility compared to gold becomes a real advantage. The $266k volatility-adjusted target is unrealistic for this year, they admit, but it points to meaningful upside potential once the cycle turns.
Meanwhile bitcoin's been struggling to break through $76k, bouncing around the $74k area. On certain platforms, funding rates on perpetuals have been negative for weeks even as open interest climbs, showing traders are still leaning bearish. The setup feels like one of those extended risk-off periods where crowded positioning eventually breaks.
Long story short: near-term headwinds are real, but the gold volatility comparison is worth tracking. If bitcoin can stabilize and rebuild its hedge narrative, that lower volatility profile versus gold could be the differentiator that matters over the next few years.