Author: Ada, Deep Tide TechFlow
Original title: The Two Weeks When the King of Safe Havens Failed, Bitcoin Quietly Outperformed Everything
In the early hours of February 28, the United States and Israel launched a joint military strike against Iran.
The textbook says: When war comes, buy gold.
But this time, the textbook seems to be wrong.
Gold briefly surged from $5,296 to $5,423, then fell all the way to around $5,020, closing lower for two consecutive weeks. Bitcoin rebounded from a panic low of $63,000 to $75,000, rising over 20%, outperforming gold, the S&P, and the Nasdaq.
The same war, the same period, gold fell, Bitcoin rose.
What exactly happened?
Gold: Strangled by Interest Rates
Gold's performance on the day the war broke out was still normal. On the 28th, the gold price surged 2%, breaking through $5,300. Panic buying poured in, everything looked exactly like the historical script.
Then the script fell apart.
On March 3, the gold price plummeted over 6%, falling to $5,085. It then fluctuated repeatedly between $5,050 and $5,200 for the next two weeks, with no clear direction. As of writing, spot gold is around $5,020, nearly 10% down from the historical high of $5,416 at the end of January.
The war is still going on, shells are still flying, but gold is falling more and more.
The chain is like this: In this war, the Strait of Hormuz was blockaded. About one-fifth of the world's seaborne oil passes through this waterway. Iran blockaded the strait, insurers withdrew ship coverage, oil tankers stopped operating, and oil prices broke through $100. The International Energy Agency urgently released 400 million barrels of strategic petroleum reserves, twice the amount during the 2022 Russia-Ukraine war. TD Securities commodity strategist Daniel Ghali said: "Such a large gap cannot be plugged."
Soaring oil prices ignited inflation expectations. The market began repricing the Federal Reserve's interest rate cut path. Before the war, the market still expected two rate cuts in 2026. But according to Bloomberg, traders now see almost zero probability of a rate cut at this week's Fed meeting.
High interest rates are the natural enemy of gold. Gold does not yield interest; the higher the interest rate, the greater the opportunity cost of holding gold. Funds naturally flow to interest-bearing assets like U.S. Treasuries. Commerzbank commodity analyst Barbara Lambrecht pointed out: "The gold price has consistently failed to benefit from this geopolitical crisis. Oil and natural gas prices rose sharply again this week, increasing inflation risks, which may force central banks to take countermeasures."
The traditional logic is that war causes panic, and panic drives up gold. But this time the chain changed—war led to soaring oil prices, which triggered inflation, inflation locked in interest rates, and interest rates suppressed gold. What gold fears is not the war itself, but the inflationary consequences brought by the war.
There is another more alarming signal. The head of the Polish central bank recently stated publicly that they are considering selling part of their gold reserves to lock in profits. Over the past three years, global central bank gold purchases have been the biggest driver of the rise in gold prices. If even central banks begin to loosen, long-term support for gold prices will develop cracks. Philip Newman, director of London precious metals consultancy Metals Focus, said: "Some investors are disappointed by gold's muted reaction after the outbreak of war and have already started reducing positions. This reduction behavior in turn reinforces the price weakness."
Bitcoin: Rising Against the Trend
On February 28, news broke of the U.S.-Israel joint strike on Iran. Bitcoin was the only liquid asset still trading that day; it plunged 8.5% in minutes, from $66,000 to $63,000.
Gold rose, the dollar rose, Bitcoin fell. Everyone's first reaction was the same: Bitcoin is a risk asset, not a safe-haven asset.
Looking back two weeks later, things are more complicated than that judgment.
On March 5, Bitcoin rebounded to $73,156. On March 13, it briefly broke through $74,000. As of writing, Bitcoin is at $73,170, up about 20% from the pre-war low. Over the same period, gold fell about 3.5%, and the S&P 500 fell about 1%.
Bitcoin outperformed all traditional safe-haven assets. That is a fact. But why?
The most popular explanation in the market is: War leads to fiscal expansion and economic recession, forcing the Fed to eventually cut rates and print money, and loose conditions are good for Bitcoin. This narrative sounds sexy, but has an obvious logical flaw—if the inflation caused by the war prevents the Fed from cutting rates, "money printing" won't happen. And even if the Fed does print money, gold also benefits. The simple "expectation of money printing" cannot explain the divergence between gold and Bitcoin.
A more honest answer is the叠加 of several factors.
First, a technical oversold rebound. Bitcoin fell from its historical high of $126,000 in October last year to $63,000, a drop of about 50%. In early February, a sudden wave of liquidations wiped out $2.5 billion in leveraged positions over a weekend. CoinDesk's analysis believes this liquidation "cleared out the weakest holders, reset market positions," leaving a leaner market. So when the war came, Bitcoin didn't have much floating supply left for retaliatory selling.
Second, the structural advantage of 24/7 trading. February 28 was a Saturday. When the U.S. and Israel struck Iran, global stock, bond, and commodity markets were closed. Bitcoin was the only open liquidity window. It got hit first because panic funds needed instant liquidation; but it was also the only place to承接 returning funds before Monday's opening.
Third, ETF fund flows back. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net inflows of over $1.34 billion in March, with three consecutive weeks of net inflows, the longest streak since July last year. BlackRock's IBIT alone attracted nearly $1 billion in new funds in March. Meanwhile, the world's largest gold ETF (SPDR Gold ETF) saw outflows of over $4.8 billion over the same period. Funds are moving, but this looks more like institutions reallocating positions; it's too early to conclude if this is a long-term trend.
Fourth, portability during war. This factor is rarely mentioned in mainstream analysis but is extremely important in the specific context of the Middle East war. Dubai is a core hub for global gold trading, connecting European, African, and Asian markets. After the war broke out, Dubai's gold logistics network was severely impacted, routes中断, insurance失效, and physical gold was trapped in warehouses unable to be shipped out. You can't carry a ton of gold bars through a war zone. Bitcoin is completely the opposite—a person can take nothing, remember 12 seed words, cross the border, and effectively take all their wealth with them. After the war broke out, outflows from Iran's largest crypto exchange, Nobitex, surged 700%. This isn't investors being bullish on Bitcoin; this is people voting with their feet in war, choosing the easiest thing to take away.
Tiger Research noted in a report: "In finance, a 'safe haven' refers to an asset whose price remains stable during a crisis. This is a completely different concept from 'an asset that can be used during a crisis.'" In this war, Bitcoin clearly belongs to the latter.
No single factor can explain everything alone. But together, they can explain why Bitcoin performed better in this war than most people expected.
Two Surprises
Putting these two lines together, this war created two surprises.
The first surprise is gold. It fell when it should have risen the most. This war directly hit energy supply, triggering not simple panic but inflation, and inflation expectations suppressed the gold price through the interest rate chain. Gold's safe-haven function is not unconditional—when the transmission path of war is crisis triggering inflation and interest rates cannot fall, gold gets stuck in the middle and can't move. There's also a often overlooked physical weakness: in war, physical gold is hard to move.
The second surprise is Bitcoin. It rose when it should have fallen the most. But this does not mean Bitcoin has "matured" into a safe-haven asset. Its performance is more like the叠加 of multiple technical factors and structural advantages. Nansen chief research analyst Aurelie Barthere noticed that Bitcoin's downside sensitivity to war news has significantly decreased; the European Stoxx index fell harder than Bitcoin during the same period. CoinDesk's analysis is more accurate: "Bitcoin is not a safe haven, nor is it a pure risk asset. It has become a 24/7 liquidity pool that absorbs shocks when other markets are closed, faster than anything else."
With every news of war escalation, Bitcoin still falls. It just falls less each time and bounces back faster.
Old Map, New World
Over the past five years, the market told a simple and powerful story: Gold is the anchor in troubled times, Bitcoin is digital gold.
The Middle East war in March 2026拆开 this story.
Gold's millennia-old safe-haven credit has not collapsed, but it exposed a weakness rarely clearly written in textbooks: when the transmission path of war is inflation rather than simple panic, interest rates are more powerful than geopolitics. Bitcoin outperformed gold, but this does not mean it has taken over the banner of "safe-haven asset." Its rise is the result of the simultaneous发力 of four lines: oversold rebound, structural advantage, institutional allocation, and war portability, not the formal coronation of its identity by the market.
Subsequent trends depend on two variables: how long this war lasts, and what the Fed ultimately chooses. Gold and Bitcoin are betting on different outcomes of the same war, and the outcome is not yet out.
The term "safe haven" may need to be redefined after this war. It is no longer a label for an asset class, but a question about the time dimension: are you hedging against today's risk, or betting on tomorrow's world?
Gold and Bitcoin gave two completely different answers.
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