The narrative surrounding Bitcoin’s year is often framed through the dollar chart, highlighting a tumultuous fourth quarter where BTC fluctuated wildly over two chaotic months.
The price surged to nearly $124,700 in late October before plummeting to the mid-$80,000s in November, a drop that wiped out more than $40,000 from its peak to its lowest point.
This volatility led traders to debate throughout the autumn whether the market’s overall structure remained stable, even as it sought to recover from the initial shock. However, when examining the same time frame in ounces of gold, a different perspective emerges.
This approach reveals an unnoticed trend underlying the market turbulence: an 11-month decline that has reduced the BTC/XAU ratio by approximately 45% from its January 12 weekly peak, maintaining this pattern even after a slight increase in early December.

The bear not visible on the dollar chart
In terms of weekly closes, Bitcoin stands about 10% below its January levels in dollar terms; however, this seemingly minor decline masks a tumultuous journey from peak to present, characterized by a rapid ascent to $125,000 followed by a swift decline into the $80,000s within mere weeks.
Even with stabilization by mid-December, where it rebounded from $89,348 on Dec. 5 to just over $92,300 by Dec. 12, the gold ratio tells a starkly different story: a drop over four times greater, persisting nearly a year without relief.
This disparity between short-term volatility in dollars and ongoing weakness in ounces raises broader questions about what “real” returns look like for investors treating Bitcoin as a hard asset.
Part of this ratio’s decline stems from gold’s own surge as real-rate expectations softened and geopolitical tensions heightened demand for safe havens.
As gold strengthens, it compresses any asset priced against it. Nevertheless, a ratio that has consistently fallen for 46 weeks sends a significant signal regarding how capital has assessed hard-asset risk throughout 2025.
The slight increase in the ratio last week, about 2–3% from Dec. 5 to Dec. 11, did not change the overall trend or jeopardize the downward trajectory established since January.
The autumn volatility in BTC/USD emphasized this point: even while Bitcoin rose from its November lows, adding several thousand dollars this week, it never approached any semblance of reversing the larger underperformance against gold.
This is where cross-asset benchmarking proves beneficial rather than merely decorative. Using gold instead of the dollar, or any fiat currency, eliminates the distortions caused by currency fluctuations and policy shifts.
It poses a straightforward question: how many ounces of gold is the market willing to trade for one unit of digital scarcity? The answer, consistently, has been “fewer than before,” and this consistency outweighs the noise of any singular sell-off or rally on the USD chart.
Insights from cross-asset benchmarking
What’s particularly intriguing about this analysis is how clearly the two charts differentiate Bitcoin’s dual identities. The USD chart illustrates its liquidity-sensitive aspects, influenced by dollar availability, ETF flows, and rapidly shifting risk appetites. The autumn turmoil fits neatly into this framework: a leverage-driven spike, a sudden reversal, and a delicate recovery.
Conversely, the XAU chart showcases Bitcoin’s hard-asset identity, emphasizing its claims to monetary neutrality and long-term reserve potential. By this measure, Bitcoin has experienced nearly a year of decline, with October’s rally barely making a dent, while November’s downturn merely extended a pre-existing trend from January.
Institutional investors assess these cross-asset dynamics. They focus not only on whether Bitcoin rebounded from a sharp decline but also on whether it has outperformed a basket of hedges, reserves, and real-assets central to institutional portfolios.
The year marked by underperformance against gold compels the Bitcoin narrative to rely more on growth, technology, and adoption, rather than the assumption that digital scarcity functions naturally as a superior hedge. This broader perspective doesn’t negate the overall narrative, but it rigorously tests it in ways that dollar-centric analyses do not.
This ratio-based evaluation has methodological caveats, as all such analyses do. Gold may be entering an overheated period, and shifts in liquidity conditions might alter the dynamics on both sides.
However, these caveats do not obscure the fundamental reality: almost every weekly close since mid-January has driven the ratio lower, irrespective of how dramatic Bitcoin’s USD fluctuations were in October and November, or the incremental gains during the second week of December.
Bitcoin’s outlook as 2026 approaches
For Bitcoin to exit this subdued bear when measured in ounces, the BTC/XAU ratio must break its eleven-month trend and establish higher weekly highs, a feat not achieved since January.
This scenario would necessitate a combination of Bitcoin’s strength and gold’s steadiness, a pairing that typically arises only during significant liquidity expansions and decreased demand for safe havens.
If gold continues to rise or maintains its position while Bitcoin remains in the wake of its autumn volatility, as evidenced this past week despite a minor recovery, the ratio may continue to decline, widening the rift between traders reliant on the USD chart and those evaluating assets through cross-asset lenses.
Benchmarking shapes the narrative surrounding cycles. The dollar chart conveys the dramatic autumn selloff and the resilience that followed. In contrast, the gold chart highlights a fundamental conviction challenge that has persisted throughout the year.
As we approach 2026, that second chart serves as a straightforward test of what Bitcoin still needs to demonstrate: resilience not just against a currency that fluctuates with policy cycles, but against other stores of value central to institutional allocations.
Until that benchmark is achieved, the ounce-denominated perspective will persist in reminding the market that volatility and directional movement are not interchangeable, and that the deeper cycle signals remain inscribed in gold.
