The question of whether Bitcoin is โdigital goldโ or a risk asset that crashes alongside stocks has defined one of the longest-running debates in crypto. Ten years of data offers a clear, if complicated, answer: Bitcoin has dramatically outperformed gold over the long term, delivering an average annualized return of roughly 54% compared to goldโs historical average of about 8%, according to BlackRock. But during periods of acute economic stress, geopolitical crisis, and recession fear, gold has consistently held its ground while Bitcoin has often sold off alongside equities. A fresh Citi study published in April 2026 suggests the answer is not either/or: a portfolio that allocates to both outperforms one that holds only gold or only Bitcoin.
Year-by-Year: Bitcoin vs Gold Since 2016
The raw annual return data tells the most direct story. Bitcoin has been the best-performing asset in 8 out of the last 11 years, according to BlackRock, but it was also the worst-performing asset in the other 3. That range of outcomes captures the core trade-off: extraordinary upside paired with drawdowns that would wipe out most traditional portfolios.
| Year | BTC Return | Gold Return | Winner | Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | +125% | +8% | Bitcoin | Post-halving rally |
| 2017 | +1,369% | +13% | Bitcoin | ICO boom, retail mania |
| 2018 | -73% | -2% | Gold | Crypto winter |
| 2019 | +95% | +18% | Bitcoin | Recovery, rate cuts |
| 2020 | +305% | +25% | Bitcoin | COVID stimulus, halving |
| 2021 | +60% | -4% | Bitcoin | Institutional adoption |
| 2022 | -64% | -1% | Gold | FTX, Luna, rate hikes |
| 2023 | +155% | +13% | Bitcoin | ETF anticipation |
| 2024 | +121% | +27% | Bitcoin | Spot ETF approval, halving |
| 2025 | -22% | +65% | Gold | Iran war, rate uncertainty |
| 2026 YTD | -20% | +46% | Gold | Geopolitical stress continues |
The pattern is visible: Bitcoin dominates during risk-on environments, halving cycles, and periods of monetary expansion. Gold dominates during crises, recessions, and periods of elevated inflation risk. The two assets are not substitutes. They respond to different macro signals.

How Each Asset Behaved During Stress Periods
The most revealing comparison comes from how each asset performed during specific stress events, not calendar years. A study by CCN analyzing 38 geopolitical events between 2016 and early 2025 found that gold outperformed Bitcoin in the medium term (90 days) in 61.8% of cases. In the short term (7 days), the two assets showed similar behavior. But Bitcoinโs average returns were higher than goldโs across all timeframes, meaning Bitcoinโs wins were larger even though they were less frequent.
The COVID-19 crash of March 2020 is the clearest case study. Bitcoin dropped 50% in two days (March 12-13) before recovering. Gold dipped roughly 12% before stabilizing. Within 12 months, Bitcoin was up over 800% from the March low, while gold gained roughly 17%. Bitcoin delivered the higher return, but only for those who could stomach a 50% crash first.
The 2022 bear market told a different story. As the Fed raised rates aggressively and FTX collapsed, Bitcoin fell 64% while gold dropped only 1%. For anyone who needed capital preservation during that year, gold was the clear winner. Bitcoinโs 155% rebound in 2023 was spectacular, but it required holding through one of the most painful drawdowns in crypto history.
The 2025-2026 Middle East crisis reinforced the pattern. When the U.S.-Iran conflict sent oil above $100 and raised recession fears, gold surged to an all-time high of $5,589 per ounce in January 2026 while Bitcoin dropped from its $126,000 peak in October 2025 to the mid-$60,000 range. Gold rose roughly 65% in 2025 while Bitcoin fell 22%. Through mid-April 2026, gold is still outperforming Bitcoin year-to-date by over 60 percentage points.
When War Rewrites the Playbook: Bitcoin, Gold, and the Fed in 2026โs First Real Stress Test
Bitcoin vs Gold: Key Metrics at a Glance
| Metric | Bitcoin | Gold |
|---|---|---|
| $10K invested in 2016 | ~$1.7 million today | ~$44,000 today |
| Annual volatility | 45โ60% | 12โ18% |
| Max drawdown (10 yr) | -77% (Nov 2022) | -21% (2022) |
| Avg annualized return | ~54% (BlackRock) | ~8% (historical avg) |
| All-time high | $126,000 (Oct 2025) | $5,589 (Jan 2026) |
| Current price (Apr 2026) | ~$77,000 | ~$4,800/oz |
| Total supply | 21 million (fixed) | ~210,000 tonnes (+1.5%/yr) |
| Market cap | ~$1.5 trillion | ~$20 trillion |
| ETF AUM (U.S.) | ~$180 billion | ~$290 billion |
What Citiโs New Research Says About Holding Both
In April 2026, Citi analyst Alex Saunders published a study arguing that the choice between Bitcoin and gold is a false binary. His finding: a 5% allocation to gold demonstrably increases portfolio efficiency when added to a traditional 60/40 stock-and-bond mix. But splitting that 5% between gold and Bitcoin produces even stronger results.
โThis combined approach shows improvements in bond-bull scenarios relative to a traditional 60/40 portfolio and better performance in bear-steepening, which post-2020 has coincided with fiscal fears and increasing inflation risk premia,โ Saunders wrote.
The logic is straightforward. Gold provides stability during crisis. Bitcoin provides asymmetric upside during expansion. Because their correlation fluctuates between positive and negative (it is not structurally stable), holding both offers genuine diversification rather than doubling down on one thesis. Citi noted that over the past two months, Bitcoin rose 9% while gold declined 4%, demonstrating how the two can move in opposite directions even within short windows.
Why They Behave Differently Under Stress
The behavioral divergence comes down to how each asset is held and traded. Gold benefits from central bank buying, which provides a structural demand floor. Global central banks purchased 27 tonnes of gold in February 2026 alone, a 575% month-over-month increase. This institutional demand stabilizes gold during market stress because central banks are buying for reserves, not for speculation.
Bitcoin, by contrast, is primarily held by retail investors, crypto funds, and corporate treasuries. When markets panic, leveraged positions get liquidated, and Bitcoin sells off alongside stocks. The correlation between Bitcoin and the S&P 500 rose sharply after the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024. Post-ETF, Bitcoin increasingly behaves as a macro risk asset rather than a hedge. Its correlation with gold has been near zero, meaning it offers diversification value but not safe-haven protection.
Bitcoinโs fixed supply of 21 million makes it structurally scarce, similar to gold. But scarcity alone does not create safe-haven status. Gold earned that status over 5,000 years of use as money, collateral, and reserves. Bitcoin is 16 years old. Its volatility (45-60% annually) is 3-4x higher than goldโs (12-18%), which means it cannot yet serve as a reliable store of value during short-term crises, even if it outperforms over full market cycles.
A Practical Framework for Allocation
The data suggests three principles for investors weighing Bitcoin against gold. First, time horizon matters more than conviction. Over 10+ years, Bitcoin has crushed gold by every return metric. Over 1-2 year windows during crises, gold has been the more reliable preserver of capital.
Second, portfolio sizing is critical. Citiโs research indicates that small allocations (2.5% each) to both gold and Bitcoin can improve overall portfolio efficiency without introducing excessive volatility. A 5% Bitcoin allocation, by contrast, would significantly increase portfolio risk during drawdowns.
Third, the role of each asset in a portfolio is different. Gold is insurance: it protects against inflation, currency debasement, and geopolitical shocks. Bitcoin is optionality: it provides exposure to a potentially transformative technology and monetary network. Treating them as interchangeable is a mistake. Treating them as complementary is where the data points.
The Verdict After 10 Years
Bitcoin is the best-performing asset of the last decade by a wide margin. Gold is the most reliable asset during the worst moments of the last decade by a wide margin. These are not contradictory statements. They describe two different functions that a portfolio needs. The investor who held only Bitcoin since 2016 is sitting on extraordinary gains but endured multiple 50-70% drawdowns. The investor who held only gold preserved capital but missed the largest asymmetric return opportunity in modern financial history. The investor who held both, in the right proportions, captured most of Bitcoinโs upside while buffering the worst of its crashes. That is what the data shows, and it is what Citi, BlackRock, and an increasing number of institutional allocators are now recommending.