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Ray Dalio Still Backs Gold, but Bitcoin Is Making the Debate Harder to Dismiss

Ray Dalio has not changed his mind. Even after one of the most tense geopolitical weeks in years, the Bridgewater founder is still making the same argument: there is only one real gold, and Bitcoin is not a replacement for it.

That view is consistent with the way Dalio has talked about reserve assets for years. In his framework, gold still sits in a category of its own because it has the longer record, deeper institutional trust, and a far more established place in the global system. The point he is making is not really about one good or bad day for Bitcoin. It is about what counts as a true long-term store of value when the world gets messy.

Why the Market Is Still Pushing Back

The reason this story is getting attention is simple: Bitcoin’s price action is making Dalio’s argument harder to keep neat. CoinDesk’s report highlighted that on the day in question, gold dropped about 3% while bitcoin fell only around 0.7%. That does not prove Bitcoin has replaced gold, but it does weaken the old idea that BTC always breaks harder when geopolitical stress spikes.

Right now, Bitcoin is still trading around the upper-$68K area. Yahoo Finance’s March 4 data shows BTC-USD closed at $68,438.31, after trading as high as $68,713.67 during the session. That is not the kind of price behavior that settles the “digital gold” debate, but it does keep the debate alive. Readers who want to stay close to those moves can track live market action on Tapbit Price.

This Is Really a Debate About What a Safe Haven Looks Like Now

Dalio is still speaking from the older macro playbook. In that world, a safe haven means something conservative, widely trusted, and deeply embedded in reserve thinking. Gold still fits that definition more cleanly than Bitcoin, which remains younger, more volatile, and still far from having the same institutional role. That is why Dalio can watch Bitcoin outperform gold over a short stretch and still refuse to treat the two as equals.

But the market is not trading history alone. It is also trading behavior. And Bitcoin’s appeal is built around a different set of properties: fixed supply, portability, digital settlement, and the ability to move value without depending on the same traditional rails. None of that automatically makes it a safer asset than gold. What it does mean is that more investors are starting to see Bitcoin as something more than a pure risk trade, especially when it manages to stay relatively stable during a rough macro week.

Why the $68K Area Matters

For traders, the $68K–$69K range matters because it is now acting as a live test of narrative, not just a chart level. If Bitcoin can keep holding this zone while the geopolitical backdrop stays tense, the “digital gold” argument is only going to get louder. If it slips quickly, the old hierarchy becomes easier to defend again.

That is why this is more than a philosophical fight between gold bulls and Bitcoin believers. It is a question of how the market is beginning to classify BTC in a world where macro shocks no longer produce the same easy reactions they once did. Users who want to stay close to that shift can follow the market on Tapbit, review trading fees, or create an account to track fast-moving crypto markets more closely.

Bottom Line

Dalio is still backing gold, and he has not softened that view. But Bitcoin does not need his approval to keep changing the conversation. At around $68.4K, BTC is not proving that it has replaced gold. What it is doing is forcing the market to admit that the old “gold is the only real hedge” argument no longer lands as cleanly as it used to when Bitcoin keeps holding up during real macro stress.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment or trading advice. Cryptocurrency markets are extremely volatile — prices can go to zero. Berachain is a new project with limited track record and significant token unlock risk. Always do your own research (DYOR) and never invest more than you can afford to lose.