
CZ and Peter Schiff engage in a lively debate over Bitcoin and tokenized gold, highlighting a fundamental conflict about trust, utility, and the future of monetary systems.
Summary
- Peter Schiff claims that tokenized, fully backed gold is the ultimate form of currency, while dismissing Bitcoin as an asset based purely on faith.
- CZ defends Bitcoin as a scarce and borderless infrastructure with tangible uses, ranging from bill payments in Africa to discreet card-based transactions.
- The discussion remains unresolved but clarifies a key choice between physical assets and digital networks as potential monetary foundations.
The latest debate from Binance goes beyond the metal-versus-code scenario or Bitcoin itself. It revolves around what people will place their trust in as inflation erodes savings, ETFs absorb retail investments, and tokenization evolves from a catchy phrase to a viable product. In “Bitcoin vs Gold: CZ & Peter Schiff Battle Over the Future of Money,” the Binance founder and the gold advocate clash over whether the future monetary system will be stored in vaults or in wallets, and who will ultimately benefit.
Vaults, tokens, Bitcoin “backed by nothing”
CZ’s virtual value and the utility card
CZ acknowledges that tokenization does enhance bullion. “Digital gold may actually surpass physical gold in many aspects,” he shares with Schiff, praising its divisibility and portability and expressing interest in listing the TGold token on Binance. What he contests is the notion that Bitcoin’s lack of physical substance makes it vulnerable. “Bitcoin itself doesn’t physically exist,” he clarifies. “What exists are transaction records on the blockchain.” He argues that this is no different in principle from the value users assign to platforms like X or Google: “The internet has no physical form [but] holds value. It functions as a utility tool.”
The utility argument now boasts real data to support it. Since January, billions have poured into spot Bitcoin ETFs across the U.S. and other markets, providing traditional asset managers and pension funds with an organized entry into what CZ describes as “an entire industry, not just a currency.” He emphasizes this framing. Bitcoin, he states, is “a two or three trillion dollar asset and its growth isn’t slowing,” with its utility evidenced not just in trading but also in payment systems, custody services, and on-chain settlements supporting everything from stablecoins to DeFi.
When Schiff asserts that Bitcoin merely “transfers itself,” CZ counters with a real-life example. An African individual contacted him, explaining that “prior to crypto, it took him three days to pay a bill in person,” but now with access to crypto via Binance, “the process takes only three minutes,” enabling him to amass savings of “$50, $100, $300, $1,000” in a low-income area. For CZ, this isn’t theoretical. “That materially improves people’s lives… it enhanced his circumstances,” he claims, noting the challenges of doing the same thing with a kilogram bar and a border checkpoint.
Speculation, cycles and who learns the lesson
Schiff continually redirects the conversation to motivations. “Bitcoin exists as a speculative digital asset,” he argues, “rather than functioning as money.” From his perspective, the influx into spot ETFs and corporate treasuries seems less like a transformative monetary movement and more reflective of typical risk trades, akin to the retail enthusiasm for tech stocks in 2021. He highlights that when Bitcoin peaked at $69,000 in the last cycle, it could purchase “37.2 ounces of gold,” whereas “now … it only buys 22.15 ounces,” indicating that “Bitcoin now purchases 40 percent fewer ounces of gold compared to four years ago.” With both gold and silver reaching new highs this year and central banks continuing their bullion acquisitions, he suggests that “a factor in Bitcoin’s past performance may have been that gold stagnated for approximately 12, 13 years,” a trend which he believes may be reversing.
In response, CZ argues that this is a selective interpretation of timelines and a limited definition of money. He reminds Schiff that he received a salary in Bitcoin as early as 2014 and that Binance conducts contracts directly in BTC rather than dollar equivalents. Additionally, he points to millions of Binance Visa cards active, which allow users to “simply swipe [the] card and the crypto is deducted,” while merchants receive fiat currency. Schiff interprets this as evidence that Bitcoin is merely collateral that gets “sold for cash,” but CZ presents it as silent adoption: from the user’s perspective, “they are utilizing it for payments.”
The debate occurs against a broader market backdrop. Michael Saylor continues to advocate for “10 million dollars a coin” at conferences, despite cyclical corrections and policy unpredictability maintaining high volatility. Simultaneously, tokenized Treasuries, stablecoins, and gold-backed assets like TGold are rapidly emerging as one of the fastest-growing segments in crypto, attracting both DeFi trials and institutional initiatives. Schiff wagers that as inflation intensifies, merchants will “prefer to accept gold” for transactions, whereas CZ believes that younger generations will gravitate toward digital solutions, ultimately benefiting Bitcoin.
Ultimately, there is no consensus reached, only a clear illustration of their opposing viewpoints. Schiff starkly states that “Bitcoin only facilitates a transfer of wealth from purchasers to sellers,” adding that “the silver lining for the youth who might be decimated by Bitcoin is that it could protect them from incurring further losses in the future.” CZ smiles, invites him to integrate TGold onto the blockchain, and leaves the audience with a statement that acts as a declaration of intent for the entire industry: “I believe gold will perform well, but I am confident Bitcoin will outperform it.”
