Pressure on Bitcoin continues as global investors shift focus to assets considered safer. Meanwhile, gold and silver record historic gains toward ambitious targets of tens of thousands of dollars, while sluggish Bitcoin performance sparks longstanding debates about whether emerging threats like quantum computing are beginning to influence market sentiment. However, on-chain experts and long-term Bitcoin developers offer a much more conventional explanation: massive profit-taking, supply releases approaching the psychological level of $100,000, and drastic shifts in liquidity at the macro level.
Capital Flight: Why Gold Outperforms Bitcoin in a Geopolitical Risk Environment
The divergence in performance between Bitcoin and traditional assets has reached its widest point since Donald Trump’s election in November 2024. Data shows striking differences over the past 2-3 months:
Bitcoin: down approximately 2-3%
Gold: gains of over 80%
Silver: spectacular rally of over 200%
Nasdaq: up around 20-25%
S&P 500: growth of about 15-20%
Gold broke through all-time high zones near $4,930 per troy ounce, while silver jumped toward levels of $95-$96. This rally was driven by capital flows seeking refuge amid rising geopolitical tensions, concerns over high national debt, and large-scale purchases by global central banks. Conversely, Bitcoin remains roughly 30% below its peak in 2025, reinforcing the narrative that cryptocurrencies are still treated more as high-risk assets rather than hedging instruments in the current macro regime.
Gold Targets Surge: From $12,000 to $23,000 in the Next Decade
Bullish forecasts for precious metals continue to rise as they dominate capital flows. Charles Edwards, founder of Capriole Investments, projects gold could break into the $12,000 to $23,000 per ounce zone within the next 3-8 years. Edwards’ argument is built on several pillars:
Record-high accumulation of gold by global central banks
Fiat money supply expanding over 10% annually
China aggressively adding gold reserves nearly tenfold in the past two years
Declining confidence in government bonds across various countries
Edwards concludes: “If this cycle reflects an unprecedented expansion of assets in the 20th century, then there is still vast room for gold to expand.” Although the daily Relative Strength Index (RSI) for gold has reached extreme levels not seen since the 1970s, analysts argue that fundamental demand—rather than pure speculation—drives this rally. Institutional capital allocation shifts indicate planned rotation, not panic buying.
Bitcoin’s continued underperformance has reopened discussions about the risks quantum computing poses to the crypto ecosystem. Nic Carter of Castle Island Ventures revisited this topic this week, stating that Bitcoin’s “unexpected” vulnerabilities may reflect growing market awareness of quantum threats.
“Bitcoin’s poor performance is caused by the threat of quantum computing,” Carter said firmly. “The market has spoken—but developers seem not to be listening.”
This statement prompted quick responses from on-chain analysts and long-term Bitcoin holders who reject this framing.
Blockchain Analysts: The Real Explanation Is Conventional Market Dynamics
On-chain researchers argue that linking Bitcoin’s consolidation to quantum computing fears is a fundamental misinterpretation of current market dynamics. Checkonchain (@Checkmatey) emphasizes that Bitcoin’s behavior reflects historical supply-side cycles rather than still-hypothetical technological threats.
“Gold has strong buyers because countries are shifting allocations from bonds to precious metals,” they explain. “Bitcoin, on the other hand, faces heavy selling pressure from long-term holders in 2025. This selling volume is enough to liquidate the bullish momentum built up previously multiple times.”
Vijay Boyapati, a Bitcoin investor and author, shares a similar view, highlighting a more concrete trigger: “The real explanation is the massive supply release when we hit an important psychological level for whales—$100,000.” On-chain data supports this thesis: long-term holders have significantly increased their distribution volume as Bitcoin approaches six digits, releasing supply that absorbs demand from new ETF buyers and institutional investors, thereby limiting upward momentum.
From Theory to Practice: Quantum Computing Still Far from Immediate Threat
Although attention to quantum computing has improved, most Bitcoin developers see this threat as a long-term, well-managed risk, far from being a short-term price pressure driver. Quantum computers capable of running algorithms like Shor—potentially capable of breaking elliptic curve cryptography—are still in laboratory development stages.
Adam Back, co-founder of Blockstream, has repeatedly stated that even in the worst-case scenario, there would be no immediate or network-wide financial losses. The proposed Bitcoin upgrade called BIP-360 has outlined a migration path toward quantum-resistant address formats, allowing a gradual transition long before credible threats materialize.
Developers emphasize that such a transition process would take years, not within a market cycle—making quantum computing an unlikely explanation for short-term Bitcoin price declines.
Traditional Finance Speaks Up, But Timeline Remains Well Beyond
Some voices from traditional finance still consider quantum computing an important future consideration. Christopher Wood, a strategy expert at Jefferies, recently removed Bitcoin from his model portfolio, citing long-term quantum risks among his concerns.
However, industry analysts note that the main challenge is not whether Bitcoin can adapt to these changes—but how long such adaptation would take if needed. The timeline is measured in decades, not quarters or years.
Bitcoin Trapped in Macro Cycles: Focus on Technical Levels Rather Than Existential Risks
For now, market participants agree that Bitcoin remains within a macro-driven environment, characterized by:
Rising bond yields in global markets
Escalating trade tensions and geopolitical uncertainties
Massive rotation from sovereign debt assets into gold
Shift in preferences from speculative growth to capital preservation
In this context, traders continue to focus on key technical levels rather than anticipating distant existential risks. Bitcoin needs to reclaim the resistance zone of $91,000–$93,500 to regain positive momentum. If this effort fails, support levels are scattered around the $85,000–$88,000 zone.
According to Cointelegraph and current market analysis (as of January 30, 2026), BTC is trading around $84,200 with 24-hour volatility at -0.41%, indicating ongoing pressure. Until monetary policy statements become clearer or geopolitical situations improve, Bitcoin is projected to remain reactive to flows rather than set trends—while gold continues to benefit from historic shifts in global investor capital allocation.
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Quantum Computing Debate Spreads as Bitcoin Falls Behind Gold Amid Global Capital Rotation
Pressure on Bitcoin continues as global investors shift focus to assets considered safer. Meanwhile, gold and silver record historic gains toward ambitious targets of tens of thousands of dollars, while sluggish Bitcoin performance sparks longstanding debates about whether emerging threats like quantum computing are beginning to influence market sentiment. However, on-chain experts and long-term Bitcoin developers offer a much more conventional explanation: massive profit-taking, supply releases approaching the psychological level of $100,000, and drastic shifts in liquidity at the macro level.
Capital Flight: Why Gold Outperforms Bitcoin in a Geopolitical Risk Environment
The divergence in performance between Bitcoin and traditional assets has reached its widest point since Donald Trump’s election in November 2024. Data shows striking differences over the past 2-3 months:
Gold broke through all-time high zones near $4,930 per troy ounce, while silver jumped toward levels of $95-$96. This rally was driven by capital flows seeking refuge amid rising geopolitical tensions, concerns over high national debt, and large-scale purchases by global central banks. Conversely, Bitcoin remains roughly 30% below its peak in 2025, reinforcing the narrative that cryptocurrencies are still treated more as high-risk assets rather than hedging instruments in the current macro regime.
Gold Targets Surge: From $12,000 to $23,000 in the Next Decade
Bullish forecasts for precious metals continue to rise as they dominate capital flows. Charles Edwards, founder of Capriole Investments, projects gold could break into the $12,000 to $23,000 per ounce zone within the next 3-8 years. Edwards’ argument is built on several pillars:
Edwards concludes: “If this cycle reflects an unprecedented expansion of assets in the 20th century, then there is still vast room for gold to expand.” Although the daily Relative Strength Index (RSI) for gold has reached extreme levels not seen since the 1970s, analysts argue that fundamental demand—rather than pure speculation—drives this rally. Institutional capital allocation shifts indicate planned rotation, not panic buying.
Quantum Computing Fears Resurface Amid Bitcoin Weakness
Bitcoin’s continued underperformance has reopened discussions about the risks quantum computing poses to the crypto ecosystem. Nic Carter of Castle Island Ventures revisited this topic this week, stating that Bitcoin’s “unexpected” vulnerabilities may reflect growing market awareness of quantum threats.
“Bitcoin’s poor performance is caused by the threat of quantum computing,” Carter said firmly. “The market has spoken—but developers seem not to be listening.”
This statement prompted quick responses from on-chain analysts and long-term Bitcoin holders who reject this framing.
Blockchain Analysts: The Real Explanation Is Conventional Market Dynamics
On-chain researchers argue that linking Bitcoin’s consolidation to quantum computing fears is a fundamental misinterpretation of current market dynamics. Checkonchain (@Checkmatey) emphasizes that Bitcoin’s behavior reflects historical supply-side cycles rather than still-hypothetical technological threats.
“Gold has strong buyers because countries are shifting allocations from bonds to precious metals,” they explain. “Bitcoin, on the other hand, faces heavy selling pressure from long-term holders in 2025. This selling volume is enough to liquidate the bullish momentum built up previously multiple times.”
Vijay Boyapati, a Bitcoin investor and author, shares a similar view, highlighting a more concrete trigger: “The real explanation is the massive supply release when we hit an important psychological level for whales—$100,000.” On-chain data supports this thesis: long-term holders have significantly increased their distribution volume as Bitcoin approaches six digits, releasing supply that absorbs demand from new ETF buyers and institutional investors, thereby limiting upward momentum.
From Theory to Practice: Quantum Computing Still Far from Immediate Threat
Although attention to quantum computing has improved, most Bitcoin developers see this threat as a long-term, well-managed risk, far from being a short-term price pressure driver. Quantum computers capable of running algorithms like Shor—potentially capable of breaking elliptic curve cryptography—are still in laboratory development stages.
Adam Back, co-founder of Blockstream, has repeatedly stated that even in the worst-case scenario, there would be no immediate or network-wide financial losses. The proposed Bitcoin upgrade called BIP-360 has outlined a migration path toward quantum-resistant address formats, allowing a gradual transition long before credible threats materialize.
Developers emphasize that such a transition process would take years, not within a market cycle—making quantum computing an unlikely explanation for short-term Bitcoin price declines.
Traditional Finance Speaks Up, But Timeline Remains Well Beyond
Some voices from traditional finance still consider quantum computing an important future consideration. Christopher Wood, a strategy expert at Jefferies, recently removed Bitcoin from his model portfolio, citing long-term quantum risks among his concerns.
However, industry analysts note that the main challenge is not whether Bitcoin can adapt to these changes—but how long such adaptation would take if needed. The timeline is measured in decades, not quarters or years.
Bitcoin Trapped in Macro Cycles: Focus on Technical Levels Rather Than Existential Risks
For now, market participants agree that Bitcoin remains within a macro-driven environment, characterized by:
In this context, traders continue to focus on key technical levels rather than anticipating distant existential risks. Bitcoin needs to reclaim the resistance zone of $91,000–$93,500 to regain positive momentum. If this effort fails, support levels are scattered around the $85,000–$88,000 zone.
According to Cointelegraph and current market analysis (as of January 30, 2026), BTC is trading around $84,200 with 24-hour volatility at -0.41%, indicating ongoing pressure. Until monetary policy statements become clearer or geopolitical situations improve, Bitcoin is projected to remain reactive to flows rather than set trends—while gold continues to benefit from historic shifts in global investor capital allocation.
#BTC #ETF