Bitcoin failed to hold $70,000. The selling pressure that followed was swift, and the support being tested now is not comfortable. And in that exact moment of weakness, one of the oldest narratives in macro investing has quietly re-entered the conversation.
A report from top analyst Darkfost has identified a developing divergence between gold and Bitcoin that markets are beginning to price. Gold, after an exceptional run that made it one of the strongest performing assets of the past year, has entered a clear correction — breaking below its 180-day moving average in a decline driven partly by margin calls and forced liquidations rather than any fundamental reassessment. The smart money that was long gold is not exiting by choice. It is being forced out.
On the other side of that trade, Bitcoin is consolidating. The price is under pressure, the $70,000 level has not held, and BTC remains below its own 180-day moving average — currently estimated at $89,700 — by a significant margin.
That gap is the problem. The capital rotation narrative requires BTC to be above its 180-day MA while gold sits below its own. One condition is met. The other is not. The trade is being discussed. It has not yet begun.
The Rotation Signal Has a Definition. Right Now, It Is Flashing Red
Darkfost’s framework is deliberately simple, and that simplicity is its strength. Two assets, two moving averages, one binary read: when BTC trades above its 180-day MA while gold trades below its own, the signal is positive — capital is diverging in Bitcoin’s favor. When both assets trade below their respective 180-day averages simultaneously, the signal is negative. No composite index, no weighted formula, no room for interpretation.
By that measure, the current reading is unambiguous. Gold has broken below its 180-day MA. Bitcoin remains below its own at $89,700. Both assets are on the wrong side of their long-term trend lines at the same time, which is the definition of a negative signal. The rotation narrative is circulating. The rotation data is not yet supporting it.
Darkfost is precise about what this framework can and cannot claim. It captures trend divergence. It does not confirm capital movement. The assumption that money leaving gold-related positions is being redirected into BTC is an extrapolation — a reasonable one given historical precedent, but an extrapolation nonetheless. Correlation between gold’s correction and Bitcoin’s stabilization is visible. Causation requires more than a chart.
The signal will turn positive the moment Bitcoin reclaims $89,700, with gold still below its own average. Until that crossing occurs, the rotation trade remains a thesis in search of its trigger.









