Bitcoin, Gold, and the US Dollar: The Clash of the "Old Money"
Every time the nightly report mentions Bitcoin, gold, or the US dollar, the comments section is never short of debates about the three. Today, let's bring them together for a chat.
Imagine if we were to make a documentary about the global financial system. Bitcoin, gold, and the US dollar would definitely be the three main characters who have been side by side for a long time, often eyeing each other with suspicion.
Their debates are never just about price fluctuations but revolve around a more fundamental question: What should money really be?
First up is Bitcoin.
When Bitcoin enters the scene, it doesn't quite resemble traditional finance. No central bank, no government, no customer service hotline—only code, algorithms, and a repeatedly quoted phrase: "In math we trust."
In the eyes of Bitcoin supporters, it is almost a perfect monetary experiment: a fixed supply (21 million coins, hardcoded into the code), decentralization (not backed by any country or central bank), and global circulation. Its core proposition is simple: "As long as humans believe in math and consensus, it has value." But its problems are also obvious: extreme price volatility; in bull markets, it talks revolution, while in bear markets, it can only talk faith.
So, Bitcoin is more like a rebellious teenager insisting it's "the currency of the future," with advanced ideals but often getting slapped in the face by reality.
Next is gold.
Compared to Bitcoin, gold is almost the "veteran" of the financial world. It doesn't need electricity, the internet, or software updates. Throughout human history, gold has experienced countless events: dynastic changes, currency collapses, wars, and inflation. Gold is never ostentatious; its attitude has always been: "Every time you get into trouble, you'll come to me in the end."
Natural scarcity is gold's greatest advantage, but its problems are also clear: it doesn't generate interest, has low liquidity and efficiency, making it seem a bit "slow" in the digital age. So, gold is more like a ballast in the financial system: it won't make you rich quickly, but it tries not to let you fail completely.
Finally, there's the US dollar.
The dollar is more like a pragmatic person in a suit, backed by aircraft carriers. It doesn't want to engage in philosophical debates. Its logic is straightforward: "Backed by the global police, international trade, energy settlements, and debt are all temporarily inseparable from me." The dollar's value doesn't come from scarcity but from national credit, tax systems, and comprehensive military, financial, and institutional backing.
As long as the current global order persists and the US can maintain relatively stable governance, the dollar remains at the center of the world monetary system. Although the trend of "de-dollarization" is growing, the reality is: under the existing system, there is no better alternative.
No matter how the three old money assets argue, fundamentally, they are not competing to see "who is more awesome," but are answering the same question: Where does value come from? Bitcoin's core value comes from math and consensus; gold's core value stems from natural scarcity and history; and the dollar's core value is rooted in the US's national credit and institutional strength.
Understanding this, we realize that they are not mutually exclusive replacements but tools suited for different scenarios.
When inflation rises and geopolitical risks intensify, gold's presence becomes more prominent; when global trade and capital flows are still functioning, the dollar remains the unavoidable settlement core; but when institutional trust declines and extreme risks are discussed, Bitcoin as a free financial instrument will be reconsidered.
This is also why, in actual asset allocation, smart money is often not about "taking sides" but about "diversifying."
Therefore, Bitcoin, gold, and the dollar are not about eliminating each other but about: which era you are in, what risks you face, and how you choose to confront uncertainty.
Financial debates may seem lively, but what truly matters is never about which side you're on, but whether you understand why you're betting.
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Bitcoin, Gold, and the US Dollar: The Clash of the "Old Money"
Every time the nightly report mentions Bitcoin, gold, or the US dollar, the comments section is never short of debates about the three. Today, let's bring them together for a chat.
Imagine if we were to make a documentary about the global financial system. Bitcoin, gold, and the US dollar would definitely be the three main characters who have been side by side for a long time, often eyeing each other with suspicion.
Their debates are never just about price fluctuations but revolve around a more fundamental question: What should money really be?
First up is Bitcoin.
When Bitcoin enters the scene, it doesn't quite resemble traditional finance. No central bank, no government, no customer service hotline—only code, algorithms, and a repeatedly quoted phrase: "In math we trust."
In the eyes of Bitcoin supporters, it is almost a perfect monetary experiment: a fixed supply (21 million coins, hardcoded into the code), decentralization (not backed by any country or central bank), and global circulation. Its core proposition is simple: "As long as humans believe in math and consensus, it has value." But its problems are also obvious: extreme price volatility; in bull markets, it talks revolution, while in bear markets, it can only talk faith.
So, Bitcoin is more like a rebellious teenager insisting it's "the currency of the future," with advanced ideals but often getting slapped in the face by reality.
Next is gold.
Compared to Bitcoin, gold is almost the "veteran" of the financial world. It doesn't need electricity, the internet, or software updates. Throughout human history, gold has experienced countless events: dynastic changes, currency collapses, wars, and inflation. Gold is never ostentatious; its attitude has always been: "Every time you get into trouble, you'll come to me in the end."
Natural scarcity is gold's greatest advantage, but its problems are also clear: it doesn't generate interest, has low liquidity and efficiency, making it seem a bit "slow" in the digital age. So, gold is more like a ballast in the financial system: it won't make you rich quickly, but it tries not to let you fail completely.
Finally, there's the US dollar.
The dollar is more like a pragmatic person in a suit, backed by aircraft carriers. It doesn't want to engage in philosophical debates. Its logic is straightforward: "Backed by the global police, international trade, energy settlements, and debt are all temporarily inseparable from me." The dollar's value doesn't come from scarcity but from national credit, tax systems, and comprehensive military, financial, and institutional backing.
As long as the current global order persists and the US can maintain relatively stable governance, the dollar remains at the center of the world monetary system. Although the trend of "de-dollarization" is growing, the reality is: under the existing system, there is no better alternative.
No matter how the three old money assets argue, fundamentally, they are not competing to see "who is more awesome," but are answering the same question: Where does value come from? Bitcoin's core value comes from math and consensus; gold's core value stems from natural scarcity and history; and the dollar's core value is rooted in the US's national credit and institutional strength.
Understanding this, we realize that they are not mutually exclusive replacements but tools suited for different scenarios.
When inflation rises and geopolitical risks intensify, gold's presence becomes more prominent; when global trade and capital flows are still functioning, the dollar remains the unavoidable settlement core; but when institutional trust declines and extreme risks are discussed, Bitcoin as a free financial instrument will be reconsidered.
This is also why, in actual asset allocation, smart money is often not about "taking sides" but about "diversifying."
Therefore, Bitcoin, gold, and the dollar are not about eliminating each other but about: which era you are in, what risks you face, and how you choose to confront uncertainty.
Financial debates may seem lively, but what truly matters is never about which side you're on, but whether you understand why you're betting.