JPMorgan: Bitcoin Outperforms Gold and Silver as Capital Flows Show Resilience
JPMorgan Chase analysts say Bitcoin is now outperforming gold and silver on capital flows, momentum, and market breadth, marking a structural reversal in how institutional money is positioning across hard assets during the March 2026 sell-off.
A research note published Wednesday by JPMorgan analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou found that gold’s liquidity conditions have deteriorated so sharply that its market breadth has fallen below Bitcoin’s, a metric where gold has historically held the advantage.
“The deterioration in liquidity conditions in gold has seen its market breadth decline below that of bitcoin currently,” Panigirtzoglou wrote in the report. The finding captures a month in which precious metals suffered steep drawdowns while Bitcoin absorbed geopolitical shock and stabilized.
$11 Billion in Gold ETF Outflows, Bitcoin Funds Still Attracting Capital
The capital flow divergence is the hardest evidence in JPMorgan’s analysis. Gold ETFs shed nearly $11 billion in net outflows during the first three weeks of March 2026, a rapid reversal for a metal that hit record highs near $5,500 per ounce in January.
Silver fared worse on a relative basis. Inflows that had accumulated into silver ETFs since last summer were fully unwound during the same period, erasing months of institutional positioning in a matter of weeks.
Bitcoin funds, by contrast, continued to attract net inflows over the same window. The divergence is notable because all three asset classes faced the same macro shock: the Iran war escalation that drove broad risk-off selling across global markets in early March. Gold and silver cracked under the pressure. Bitcoin bent but did not break.
This flow pattern matters because ETF flows represent actual capital allocation decisions by institutional and retail investors, not just price movement. Money is actively leaving gold and silver vehicles while continuing to enter Bitcoin products, a signal that goes beyond short-term price action. Amid broader market turbulence, U.S. short-term bond yields have jumped as rate hike expectations returned, adding pressure to non-yielding assets like gold.
Gold Down 15%, Silver Nearly Halved, Bitcoin Holds $69,000
The price performance gap tells the same story. Gold has fallen roughly 15% month-to-date, sliding from record territory near $5,500 per ounce in January to approximately $4,450 per ounce at the time of JPMorgan’s report.
Silver’s decline has been even more severe. After peaking near $120 per ounce, silver dropped to approximately $69 per ounce, a drawdown of more than 40% from its highs.
Bitcoin initially dropped to the low-$60,000 range during the Iran war outbreak but recovered to trade in the high-$60,000 to low-$70,000 range. At the time of JPMorgan’s report, Bitcoin was trading around $69,000.
The contrast is significant: gold, the traditional safe haven, suffered a deeper and more sustained drawdown than Bitcoin during a geopolitical crisis, precisely the type of event that historically drives capital into precious metals rather than out of them.
CME Futures and CTA Momentum: Institutions Cutting Gold, Holding Bitcoin
JPMorgan’s report examined CME futures open interest data, which tracks institutional positioning. Gold and silver futures positioning declined sharply from January levels, reflecting a broad institutional de-risking from precious metals.
Bitcoin futures positioning, by contrast, remained relatively stable through the same period. The gap in institutional conviction is visible in the derivatives market, not just in ETF flows.
Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs), systematic funds that follow momentum signals, reduced their gold and silver exposure from overbought levels to below-neutral. These are trend-following strategies that amplify moves in both directions; their exit from gold and silver added selling pressure on top of fundamental outflows.
Bitcoin’s CTA momentum picture looks different. Momentum indicators for Bitcoin were recovering from oversold levels toward neutral, suggesting the worst of the systematic selling pressure may have passed. This is consistent with Bitcoin’s price stabilization after the initial Iran-war drop.
The combination of stable futures positioning and recovering momentum signals is what JPMorgan characterizes as “resilience,” a word that in institutional research carries specific meaning: the asset absorbed a shock and showed structural demand at lower levels rather than cascading liquidation.
A Reversal in the Gold-Bitcoin Institutional Hierarchy
JPMorgan’s finding that gold’s market breadth now trails Bitcoin’s is historically unusual. Gold has traditionally been the deeper, more liquid, more institutionally established market. For its breadth to fall below Bitcoin’s signals a structural shift in how institutional capital views the two assets.
JPMorgan has been gradually warming to Bitcoin’s institutional case over the past two years. The bank’s analysts noted that Bitcoin looks “even more attractive” versus gold over the long term, given gold’s large outperformance since October and the sharp rise in gold volatility. This is not a sudden reversal; it is an acceleration of a trend in JPMorgan’s research output.
The timing coincides with broader institutional signals. Goldman Sachs has been building significant positions in crypto ETF products, and Bernstein analysts called a Bitcoin bottom on March 24, maintaining a $150,000 year-end price target. The institutional consensus is shifting, not uniformly, but directionally.
JPMorgan’s own asset management arm has previously disclosed Bitcoin ETF holdings in 13F filings, meaning the bank is not merely observing the Bitcoin-versus-gold rotation; it is participating in it. The gap between Jamie Dimon’s public skepticism toward Bitcoin and the bank’s analyst-level research and trading desk activity has been a recurring feature of JPMorgan’s relationship with crypto.
Meanwhile, NYSE has been exploring blockchain integration into its market infrastructure, another sign that traditional financial institutions are moving beyond theoretical interest in digital assets.
Catalysts That Could Confirm or Challenge JPMorgan’s Thesis
Several concrete events in the coming weeks will test whether Bitcoin’s relative resilience holds.
The Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting is the most significant macro catalyst. With oil above $100 per barrel and geopolitical risk elevated, the Fed’s rate path will directly affect both gold and Bitcoin. Higher-for-longer rates have historically pressured gold more than Bitcoin, which could extend the divergence JPMorgan identified.
Weekly Bitcoin ETF flow data, published by trackers including Farside Investors and SoSoValue, will show whether the inflow pattern JPMorgan documented is accelerating or fading. A reversal in Bitcoin fund flows would undermine the resilience narrative; continued inflows would strengthen it.
The crypto Fear and Greed Index currently sits at 10, deep in Extreme Fear territory. Historically, sentiment readings this low have preceded recoveries, though the Iran war adds an exogenous variable that makes historical patterns less reliable.
Gold’s next test will be whether the $4,400-$4,500 range holds as support or whether the sell-off deepens. Further gold weakness would reinforce the capital rotation thesis. A gold bounce, particularly if driven by renewed geopolitical escalation, would test whether Bitcoin can maintain its relative outperformance when both assets are bid simultaneously.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does JPMorgan’s view on Bitcoin matter to crypto markets?
JPMorgan Chase is the largest bank in the United States by assets and one of the most-cited sources for institutional investment research. When its analysts publish a note stating Bitcoin is outperforming gold on flow and momentum metrics, it signals to other institutional allocators that Bitcoin is being taken seriously as a macro asset, not just a speculative trade.
How does Bitcoin compare to gold as a store of value in 2026?
In March 2026, Bitcoin has outperformed gold on a month-to-date basis. Gold fell approximately 15% from record highs while Bitcoin stabilized in the $69,000 range after an initial sell-off. JPMorgan’s report found that gold’s market breadth has actually declined below Bitcoin’s, reversing the historical norm where gold was the more liquid and broadly held asset.
What are capital flows and why do they indicate resilience?
Capital flows measure the net movement of money into and out of investment products like ETFs and funds. Gold ETFs saw nearly $11 billion in net outflows in early March 2026, while Bitcoin funds continued to attract net inflows. This divergence shows that investors are actively choosing to allocate capital toward Bitcoin and away from gold, a stronger signal than price movement alone because it reflects deliberate portfolio decisions.
Has JPMorgan invested in Bitcoin or Bitcoin ETFs?
JPMorgan’s asset management division has disclosed holdings in spot Bitcoin ETFs through regulatory 13F filings. While CEO Jamie Dimon has publicly expressed skepticism about Bitcoin, the bank’s trading desks and research analysts have increasingly treated it as a legitimate institutional asset class.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.








