Markets Share Share this article Copy linkX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail Bitcoin isn’t losing to gold. It is navigati Markets Share Share this article Copy linkX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail Bitcoin isn’t losing to gold. It is navigati

Bitcoin isn’t losing to gold. It is navigating a liquidity squeeze that the yellow metal never had: Asia Morning Briefing

2026/02/06 10:36
6 min read
Share
Share this article
Copy linkX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail

Bitcoin isn’t losing to gold. It is navigating a liquidity squeeze that the yellow metal never had: Asia Morning Briefing

QCP's Darius Sit says October's deleveraging event exposed the real divide: bitcoin trades like collateral, altcoins trade like a bet on exchange governance

By Sam Reynolds|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf
Feb 6, 2026, 2:36 a.m.
Make us preferred on Google

What to know:

  • Bitcoin’s recent underperformance versus gold reflects liquidity and position unwinds rather than a breakdown of its long-term inflation-hedge narrative, according to QCP Capital’s Darius Sit.
  • The Oct. 10 deleveraging shock exposed stark differences in liquidity and credit risk between bitcoin and altcoins, eroding trust in exchanges that resorted to socialized losses during the crash.
  • Bitcoin and ether rebounded sharply from liquidation-driven sell-offs, while gold and major Asian equity indexes, including Japan’s Nikkei 225, slipped amid a broader risk-off move.

Good Morning, Asia. Here's what's making news in the markets:

Welcome to Asia Morning Briefing, a daily summary of top stories during U.S. hours and an overview of market moves and analysis. For a detailed overview of U.S. markets, see CoinDesk's Crypto Daybook Americas.
The market has been asking whether bitcoin is losing to gold. Darius Sit, co-founder and Managing Partner at QCP Capital, says the debate is often framed around price when liquidity realities matter more.

Singapore-based QCP is one of Asia's largest trading desks, with over $60 billion in annual volume.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters
Sign me up

“If you’re comparing Bitcoin to gold, it’s not a like-for-like comparison… you’re talking about almost like a mouse versus an elephant kind of comparison,” Sit told CoinDesk. “You have two different sets of idiosyncratic market forces affecting market price in the short term, but on the longer-term narrative, I think, [they] remain quite similar.”

Gold’s dominance reflects sovereign demand, entrenched market structure, and sheer scale. Bitcoin’s lag owes more to position unwinds than thesis collapse. Gold’s market cap is so large that its daily swings can exceed bitcoin’s entire valuation, turning short-term divergence into a physics problem rather than a narrative verdict.

However, “in the longer term, narrative looks the same,” Sit said.

A bigger inflection point, in his view, isn’t bullion’s rally but crypto’s Oct. 10 (now called 10/10) deleveraging event. That episode drew a hard line between bitcoin and the rest of the digital asset complex, exposing how liquidity and credit mitigation diverge once leverage snaps.

“October 10 revealed that … there is a very clear line in terms of the liquidity between crypto, altcoins and bitcoin,” Sit said. The takeaway isn’t that crypto lost its appeal, but that much of the market discovered its true depth only after forced unwinds cleared the book. What remained was a thinner landscape where price moves sharply in either direction.

One of the most important lessons of "10/10" was how crypto venues handle credit when things break.

Sit drew a stark contrast with traditional markets, where layered broker and clearinghouse structures absorb shocks before losses reach end users.

Native crypto exchanges, by comparison, often operate as single points of failure, relying on shareholder equity, insurance funds, and, in extreme cases, socialized loss.

“The moment you trigger socialized loss, your platform will lose trust,” Sit said, describing what he views as the industry’s real institutional ceiling. Volatility isn’t the deterrent. The problem emerges when traders cannot predict how liquidations and counterparty risk will be managed in a stress event.

Socialized loss occurs when an exchange's insurance fund cannot cover bankrupt positions, forcing the platform to close out profitable traders' positions to cover the shortfall, effectively making winners pay for others' losses. This happened on many major exchanges during the Oct. 10 market crash.

He added that participants perceived the rules as inconsistent, with some products or counterparties appearing insulated while others absorbed the hit.

That perception lingers longer than the price drawdown itself. Markets can rebuild leverage and volume, but trust in liquidation governance is slower to return.

The result is a divided landscape where bitcoin retains credibility due to deeper liquidity and clearer use as collateral, while the broader altcoin complex trades with a structural discount tied less to macro direction than to venue design and counterparty confidence.

In Sit’s view, bitcoin still behaves like a long-horizon inflation hedge and an increasingly legible form of collateral, whereas the broader altcoin universe is more directly subject to venue governance and order-book depth than to macro narratives alone.

“When something has poor liquidity, it can go down a lot. It can go up a lot,” Sit said.

Market Movement

BTC: Bitcoin swung violently but edged up about 5% in the last hour as extreme volatility followed a liquidation-driven plunge toward $60,000, with the RSI near 17 signaling historically oversold conditions that often precede sharp relief bounces even as price hovers near the $58,000 to $60,000 support zone.

ETH: Ether traded around $1,895, rebounding about 7% in the past hour after a liquidation-driven selloff, with volatility surging as deeply oversold momentum conditions triggered a short-term relief bounce despite double-digit losses over the past 24 hours.

Gold: Gold slipped about 3.7% to roughly $4,740 per ounce in a broad risk-asset pullback and profit-taking wave, but analysts argue the longer-term uptrend remains supported by persistent central-bank buying, debt and currency-confidence concerns, and forecasts that still see potential for prices to push toward $7,000 later in 2026 despite short-term volatility.

Nikkei 225: The Nikkei 225 slipped about 1% to extend a three-day losing streak as a Wall Street tech rout spilled into Asia, dragging South Korea’s Kospi down as much as 5%, pressuring Hong Kong and Australian equities, and reinforcing a broader risk-off tone that also weighed on silver and other volatile assets.

Elsewhere in Crypto

  • U.S. Treasury's Bessent calls out crypto 'nihilists' resisting market structure bill (CoinDesk)
  • Tom Lee's Bitmine now $8 billion underwater as ether tumbles below $2,000 (CoinDesk)
btc crashGold
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Fed Makes First Rate Cut of the Year, Lowers Rates by 25 Bps

Fed Makes First Rate Cut of the Year, Lowers Rates by 25 Bps

The post Fed Makes First Rate Cut of the Year, Lowers Rates by 25 Bps appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Federal Reserve has made its first Fed rate cut this year following today’s FOMC meeting, lowering interest rates by 25 basis points (bps). This comes in line with expectations, while the crypto market awaits Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s speech for guidance on the committee’s stance moving forward. FOMC Makes First Fed Rate Cut This Year With 25 Bps Cut In a press release, the committee announced that it has decided to lower the target range for the federal funds rate by 25 bps from between 4.25% and 4.5% to 4% and 4.25%. This comes in line with expectations as market participants were pricing in a 25 bps cut, as against a 50 bps cut. This marks the first Fed rate cut this year, with the last cut before this coming last year in December. Notably, the Fed also made the first cut last year in September, although it was a 50 bps cut back then. All Fed officials voted in favor of a 25 bps cut except Stephen Miran, who dissented in favor of a 50 bps cut. This rate cut decision comes amid concerns that the labor market may be softening, with recent U.S. jobs data pointing to a weak labor market. The committee noted in the release that job gains have slowed, and that the unemployment rate has edged up but remains low. They added that inflation has moved up and remains somewhat elevated. Fed Chair Jerome Powell had also already signaled at the Jackson Hole Conference that they were likely to lower interest rates with the downside risk in the labor market rising. The committee reiterated this in the release that downside risks to employment have risen. Before the Fed rate cut decision, experts weighed in on whether the FOMC should make a 25 bps cut or…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 04:36
USD/INR edges lower as Indian Rupee gains on improving equity inflows

USD/INR edges lower as Indian Rupee gains on improving equity inflows

The post USD/INR edges lower as Indian Rupee gains on improving equity inflows appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. USD/INR loses ground on Tuesday after two days
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/10 12:37
Sahara AI has entered into a strategic partnership with South Korean payment giant Danal Fintech to jointly build a stablecoin AI payment system.

Sahara AI has entered into a strategic partnership with South Korean payment giant Danal Fintech to jointly build a stablecoin AI payment system.

PANews reported on February 10th that artificial intelligence company Sahara AI has entered into a deep collaboration with Danal Fintech, one of South Korea's largest
Share
PANews2026/02/10 12:42