Ray Dalio said Bitcoin transactions can be monitored and controlled, limiting central bank interest. He stated that privacy gaps reduce Bitcoin’s appeal as a reserve asset. He also compared BTC’s market structure and correlation to stocks with gold’s global role.
Dalio wrote on X that “Bitcoin lacks privacy,” and he linked that issue to central banks. He said Bitcoin transactions can be monitored and potentially controlled on the public ledger. Therefore, he argued that central banks avoid holding BTC as reserves.

Bitcoin runs on a decentralized blockchain that records every transfer in real time. Anyone can use a block explorer and review wallet activity. Although addresses remain pseudonymous, analytics firms often trace flows to individuals or institutions.
Dalio confirmed that he holds about 1% of his portfolio in bitcoin. However, he maintained that privacy limits broader sovereign adoption. He explained that a central bank may hesitate to accumulate assets with visible transaction flows.
Participants at Consensus Hong Kong in February raised similar privacy concerns. They said institutional adoption may require stronger privacy features. Large transactions, they added, demand more confidentiality within blockchain systems.
Market data reflected growing interest in privacy-focused assets during 2025. Zcash (ZEC) surged more than 800% since early 2025. In contrast, Bitcoin declined over 10% during the same period.
Dalio also questioned Bitcoin’s behavior during market stress. He said BTC often moves with technology stocks rather than acting independently. That pattern, he argued, weakens its reserve asset case.
TradingView data showed a 90-day correlation coefficient of 0.89 between bitcoin and the Nasdaq. This figure translates into an R² of 0.79. Therefore, about 79% of bitcoin’s price movements aligned with Nasdaq performance over that period.
Dalio pointed to market structure and scale differences between bitcoin and gold. He said gold remains widely held and deeply established worldwide. He added that gold still plays a central role in the global financial system.
He described Bitcoin as a smaller market that participants can influence more easily. While corporations and institutions increased exposure, he said, central banks remain cautious. “Ultimately, gold is more widely held,” Dalio stated in his post.
At the time of writing, bitcoin traded at $80,647.90. Dalio reiterated his allocation stance while favoring gold over bitcoin. He repeated that privacy and correlation concerns limit BTC’s reserve asset prospects.
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