Bitcoin’s positioning relative to gold continues to deteriorate, challenging the long held narrative of bitcoin as digital gold.
While gold pushes to fresh record highs just below $4,900 an ounce and is up roughly 12% year to date, bitcoin is only marginally positive on the year and remains below $89,000.
This divergence is also clear across longer time frames. On both one year and five year views, gold has delivered better returns. Over five years, bitcoin is up around 150%, while gold has risen approximately 160%.
The BTC to gold ratio currently sits near 18.46, firmly below its 200 week moving average (WMA), which reflects the long term trend based on nearly four years of price data. The 200WMA stands around 21.90, placing the ratio roughly 17% below the 200WMA. $BTC #WEFDavos2026
Fed’s main gauge shows inflation at 2.8% in November, edging further away from target
Inflation drifted slightly further from the Federal Reserve’s target in November though in line with expectations, according to the central bank’s preferred gauge released Thursday. The personal consumption expenditures price index, a Commerce Department measure the central bank uses as its main forecasting tool, showed inflation at 2.8% for the month both for headline and core, in line with the Dow Jones consensus. In addition, the department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that the rate for October was 2.7% on both a headline and core basis, the latter excluding volatile food and energy prices. The monthly figures showed a 0.2% increase for both months. The BEA released the October and November numbers together due to impacts from the government shutdown during which official agencies suspended data collection and reports. In addition to the inflation figures, the report showed personal income up 0.1% in October and 0.3% in November, the latter 0.1 percentage point below the forecast. Also, personal consumption expenditures, a proxy for consumer spending, rose 0.5% in both months, matching the November forecast. The personal savings rate rose in November to 3.5%, down 0.2 percentage point from the prior month. Price figures for November reflected 0.2% increases in both goods and services. Food was flat while energy-related costs rose 1.9% and after falling 0.7% in October. The report comes the same day that the BEA said gross domestic product rose 4.4% in the third quarter, according to the second and final estimate. In addition, the Labor Department reported that jobless claims are trending around their lowest level in two years. Together, the data indicates an economy continuing to expand, with consumer spending ahead of inflation despite a somewhat softening labor market. “The consumer continues to drive the U.S economy, with today’s data pointing to another strong gain in spending. This resilience comes in spite of last year’s slowdown in the labor market, and still elevated inflation, both of which have weighed on real incomes,” said James McCann, senior economist for investment strategy at Edward Jones. “Today’s data should reassure the Fed that the economy remains on a solid footing, despite a cooler labor market.” Markets expect the Federal Reserve to stay on hold at its policy meeting next week following three consecutive interest rate cuts in 2025. Futures traders see at most two rate reductions this year as policymakers weigh the impact of last year’s easing, coupled with continued inflation pressures and an uncertain geopolitical landscape. $BTC $ETH $BNB #WEFDavos2026 #WhoIsNextFedChair #WhoIsNextFedChair