July 22, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Tokenized Stocks Expose a Major Tax Reporting Gap in Crypto—Robin Singh Privacy Is Key to the Next Phase of Ethereum PEPE Dips Slightly as Market Cools, but Outperforms Broader Memecoin Sector FBI ends probe of Kraken co-founder, returns confiscated devices — Report ATOM Slips 5% as Bitcoin Regains Dominance After Altcoin Season The Senate Must Finish the Job on America’s Pro-Crypto Future—Emmer, Begich Senate Releases Answer to Clarity Act as It Continues Market Structure Work BNB Drops After Failed Breakout, Key Support Holds as Corporate Accumulation Grows A16z Crypto Leads $15M Seed Round Into Decentralized AI Data Layer Poseidon EDX Unveils International Crypto Trading Platform With Perpetual Futures

Bitcoin Hits $123,000, Overtakes Gold as 2025’s Top Asset

Bitcoin (BTC) has surged to new all-time highs above $123,000 and just logged its highest-ever weekly close at $119,500, following another record weekly close the week before. Year to date, BTC is now up around 30%, pulling ahead of gold which has gained approximately 27% during the same period.

According to analysis by Charlie Bilello, chief market strategist at Creative Planning, bitcoin and gold are the top two performing assets so far in 2025. Bilello notes, “We’ve never seen these two in the number one and number two spots for any calendar year.”

However, there is a downside to having two largely unproductive assets as the year’s best performers. When bitcoin and gold lead the pack, it often signals investor anxiety or crisis conditions rather than confidence in the broader economy.

In theory, productive capital allocation should be rewarded, but these trends risk discouraging investment in the real economy. This distortion stems from artificially altered costs of capital.

Since the passage of the “big beautiful bill” on July 3, bitcoin has rallied by roughly $15,000. According to The Kobeissi Letter, bitcoin has entered “crisis mode,” with U.S. interest rates remaining structurally high.

Meanwhile, the dollar index (DXY) has fallen 11% over the past six months. In that same timeframe, tariffs have been delayed, U.S.-China trade negotiations have oscillated, and tensions have escalated with U.S. military strikes involving Iran. Additionally, the world’s largest economy recorded a historic $316 billion budget deficit in May.

Taken together, these factors highlight a financial landscape shaped by geopolitical uncertainty, fiscal strain, and investors gravitating toward perceived safe havens like bitcoin and gold.

Read more: As Bitcoin Rushes Past $122K, What’s Next for Ether, XRP, Dogecoin?

This post was originally published on this site

Please enter Coingecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works