A newly circulated research paper suggests that Bitcoin could rise as much as 500% in the wake of gold reaching new highs, arguing that the market has not yet priced in a potential capital rotation from gold into Bitcoin.
The thesis is simple but bold:
If gold has already repriced for macro risk, Bitcoin may be next.
Historically, gold has acted as the first responder to:
Bitcoin, often described as “digital gold,” has tended to follow—sometimes with a lag, but with much higher beta.
The paper argues that gold’s breakout represents macro validation, not the end of the trade.
According to the research, Bitcoin has structural advantages that can drive outsized upside once capital begins rotating:
In this framing, Bitcoin doesn’t need to replace gold—just absorb a fraction of gold’s market cap.
A 500% move would imply Bitcoin capturing meaningful share from:
Even a 10–15% gold‑to‑Bitcoin reallocation, the paper argues, could justify such a move due to Bitcoin’s fixed supply and relatively small market size.
The authors claim the market is underestimating:
Gold’s move is visible and accepted. Bitcoin’s equivalent repricing has not yet occurred.
The paper acknowledges key risks:
The 500% scenario is conditional, not guaranteed.
The research frames gold’s new high as a signal, not a finish line. If Bitcoin is increasingly viewed as a superior store of value, even modest capital rotation from gold could drive asymmetric upside.
In that view:
Bitcoin flipping gold isn’t priced in—yet.


