With Gold Stalling, Is It Bitcoin’s Turn? Traders Eye $95K as Key Breakout Level


The crypto market’s rally stalled on Wednesday after U.S. Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent reiterated that a proper trade deal between Washington and Beijing would take years to ink out.

Bitcoin (BTC) is up 2.6% in the last 24 hours and 12.2% in the last seven days, trading at $93,600 for the first time since the beginning of March. The largest cryptocurrency was outperformed by large swaths of the market, with the CoinDesk 20 — an index of the top 20 coins, excluding stablecoins, memecoins and exchange tokens — rose 4.2% in the last 24 hours. Sui (SUI) jumped 24% in that period of time, while Cardano’s ADA and Chainlink’s LINK both saw 7% gains.

CoinDesk 20 Index performance (CoinDesk)

CoinDesk 20 Index performance (CoinDesk)

Crypto stocks, which opened strong, saw their performance dampen as the day unfolded. Miners such as Bitdeer (BTDR) and Core Scientific (CORZ) fell back from double-digit gains, closing the day up roughly 4%. Coinbase (COIN) and Strategy (MSTR) are up 2.1% and 1.4%, respectively.

U.S. President Donald Trump seemed to be dialing down the pressure on China in the last few days, saying that tariffs on the Middle Kingdom would “come down substantially” on Tuesday. Bessent, however, said on Wednesday that the White House had not made a unilateral offer to cut tariffs on China, and that a deal between the two nations would take two to three years to achieve.

“A meaningful thaw in relations may not materialize until substantive news emerges from the upcoming Xi-Trump meeting,” said Paul Howard, director at crypto trading firm Wincent. Markets priced in the initial tough stances and tariff threats, which kept a lid on risk appetite over the past two months, he said.

“History suggests that once the opening volleys pass, more constructive developments and easing volatility typically follow,” Howard said, which could support risk assets such as crypto.

BTC ETF flows return

In a sign of renewed investor demand, U.S.-listed spot BTC exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have recorded nearly $1.3 billion in net inflows this week so far, according to SoSoValue data. The funds booked their strongest day on Tuesday since mid-January.

“This [crypto] rally isn’t retail-driven hype—it’s institutional capital positioning ahead of what many see as a new monetary and political regime,” said Matt Mena, crypto research strategist at digital asset manager 21Shares. “More investors are turning to it not just as a speculative asset, but as a flight to safety amid rising uncertainty across traditional markets.”

Despite the strong price action, Mena added that BTC is facing resistance at around the $95,000 level in the short term and could pull back.

Bitcoin to catch up to gold

Gold, meanwhile, is down 2.5% today, trading at $3,290 per ounce after a run that saw the precious metal rise 35% to $3,500 in the span of four months, possibly hinting that the market could be moving past peak uncertainty.

Gold stalling after a massive rally could bode well for bitcoin, said Charles Edwards, founder of bitcoin-focused hedge fund Capriole Investments. Posting a chart on X on Wednesday, he noted that BTC historically followed gold’s gains with a few-month lag.

Bitcoin tended to follow gold's rallies with a lag over the past years (Charles Edwards)

Bitcoin tended to follow gold’s rallies with a lag over the past years (Charles Edwards)

“Bitcoin is showing significant strength,” Edwards said in an X post. “We have decoupled from risk assets and the market is now starting to front-run the fact that bitcoin is digital gold. If risk assets were to decay further from here, BTC is the ultimate QE [quantitative easing] hedge.”

Read more: Bitcoin Breaches ‘Ichimoku Cloud’ to Flash Bullish Signal While Altcoins Lag: Technical Analysis





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