Imagine this: a geopolitical crisis hits, markets tremble – and what happens? Bitcoin rises. Gold falls. Exactly the opposite of what classical financial theory has been preaching for decades.
"Safe haven" assets flow into gold during times of crisis. That's the rule. Has been for centuries. And now? Bitcoin just breaks it. Casually. Without bothering to explain itself.
Wait. What just happened here?
What Just Happened – and Why It Matters
Before I start gushing – and I will start gushing – it's worth taking a moment to understand what's really behind this divergence. Because it's not a coincidence. And it's not magic.
James Butterfill from CoinShares analysed this in detail, and his explanation is illuminating.
Why Bitcoin Rose
In the weeks leading up to the crisis, major investors had massively reduced their Bitcoin positions – around 39 billion dollars were withdrawn from the market. Leverage, meaning speculative borrowing, dropped from 33 to 25 percent.
What does that mean in practice? Bitcoin was cleaned up. Less leveraged speculation means: when a crisis hits and panic sets in, there are fewer positions that have to be force-liquidated. No internal pressure on the price.
When the crisis struck, there was simply nothing left in Bitcoin that had to be forcibly sold. The price was free to move – and it moved upward.
Why Gold Fell
This sounds paradoxical, but it's market logic: the oil price shock pushed inflation expectations higher in the short term. Higher inflation means higher real interest rates. And gold, as a non-yielding asset, suffers exactly then – because bonds and other instruments suddenly look more attractive.
So gold didn't fail because it suddenly became worse. It suffered because the traditional financial system around it reacted in a very specific way.
That's the crucial difference.
Bitcoin Plays by Different Rules – Because It Has Different Rules
This is where it gets interesting. And yes, now I'm going to gush a little.
Bitcoin operates outside the classical financial infrastructure. There's no central bank steering the price. No clearing house that can block transactions. No board of directors deciding in an emergency meeting what happens to the price.
The traditional financial world is used to moving markets. In times of crisis, liquidations are forced, credit lines are cut, directions are imposed. That works for stocks, bonds, gold – because all those markets are deeply embedded in the existing financial system.
With Bitcoin, that no longer works as cleanly. The market is more decentralised. The structure is more transparent. And the reaction is different – because the foundation is different.
That's not a bug. That's the feature.
Satoshi Nakamoto created Bitcoin in 2008 – right in the middle of the worst financial crisis in decades – as a direct response to that system. The idea was simple: money that works without needing permission. That can't be captured. That doesn't play by the rules of the financial establishment.
If Bitcoin rises during a crisis while the traditional system breaks its own rules – Satoshi would probably be very satisfied.
A Trust Signal – One You Should Remember
Bitcoin is influenced by crises. That's normal – it's a market, not an oracle. But it can't be influenced the way the classical financial world is used to.
That's a strong signal. Not because Bitcoin is now perfect or because the price will only ever go up – that would be naive. But because this behaviour shows: Bitcoin has developed its own logic. A logic that works independently of the traditional system.
Native blockchains like Bitcoin are no longer toys for speculative retail investors. They are their own asset class. With their own behaviour. And the crisis just made that visible to everyone – including those who didn't want to believe it.
The Principle Behind It Is Bigger Than Bitcoin
And that's the part that really stays with me.
Because what Bitcoin proves here isn't just an argument for Bitcoin. It's an argument for the principle behind it: native blockchains. Blockchains that function independently – without intermediaries, without central control, without permission.
Projects like Infinity-Economics are built on exactly that foundation. Not as a copy of Bitcoin, but as a consistent evolution – for a broader range of applications, with more features, for more people. If you understand why Bitcoin reacted differently in this crisis, you also understand why that's the right direction.
Decentralised. Independent. Uncapturable.
What This Means for You
Bitcoin has arrived. Not in the sense of "finished" – there's still a long road ahead. But in the sense of: it is an independent asset with its own behaviour. It doesn't play by the old rules because it never accepted those rules in the first place.
The crisis made that visible. And that's good. Very good.
If you want to understand more about how native blockchains work and what Infinity-Economics has planned, visit ieCommunity.net. We explain these things there – without buzzword salad, without hype promises.
Source of inspiration: Bitcoin vs. Gold, cash-online.de

