Why Bitcoin Is Outperforming Gold Right Now, According to Pompliano
Bitcoin has surged roughly 8% since US-Iran tensions escalated in late February 2026, while gold has dropped as much as 13% over the same stretch. Investor and podcast host Anthony Pompliano argues this divergence is no accident, calling Bitcoin a superior geopolitical hedge due to its borderless, non-sovereign design.
The numbers frame a striking reversal. Over the 16-day window since the US and Israel launched joint military operations against Iran on February 28, Bitcoin climbed approximately 7% while gold fell around 2%, according to a Benzinga analysis of Pompliano’s commentary. On a broader recent basis, Bitcoin has gained roughly 34% against gold.
This marks the first time Bitcoin has outperformed every traditional safe-haven asset, including gold, bonds, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq, during a major geopolitical crisis. Bitcoin traded at $70,117 on March 24 with a market cap of $1.40 trillion, still 44.4% below its all-time high of $126,080 set in October 2025.
Gold’s decline caught many investors off guard. Analysts attributed the selloff to institutional liquidity needs and a strengthening dollar, as fund managers sold gold to meet margin calls and cover losses elsewhere. Even as gold recently touched record highs near $3,000 per ounce, its performance during the acute phase of the Iran crisis lagged Bitcoin by a wide margin.
Pompliano: Bitcoin Is “Global Insurance” in a Way Gold Cannot Be
Pompliano’s thesis centers on Bitcoin’s structural properties. He described Bitcoin as “a non-sovereign, decentralized asset that can be moved instantly across borders” during periods of capital controls and geopolitical instability.
In separate commentary, Pompliano called Bitcoin “more ‘global insurance’ than gold during periods of financial stress,” citing its divisibility, portability, and resilience as advantages over the traditional safe-haven metal.
The specific geopolitical trigger: the US and Israel launched Operations Epic Fury and Roaring Lion against Iran on February 28, 2026. Iran responded by closing the Strait of Hormuz, halting approximately 20% of global oil supply. The resulting shock rippled across commodities, equities, and safe-haven assets simultaneously.
Pompliano argued that Bitcoin’s strength in this environment is “structural, not speculative.” His reasoning rests on three pillars. First, ETF-driven institutional ownership has created a long-term holder base that does not panic-sell during geopolitical shocks. Second, Bitcoin’s 24/7 trading enables real-time repricing of geopolitical events while traditional markets sit closed. Third, the magnitude of Bitcoin selloffs has decreased with each successive Iran-related escalation, suggesting market maturation.
Beyond Bitcoin, Pompliano recommended investors consider diversification across AI, energy, and infrastructure alongside BTC during periods of sustained geopolitical uncertainty.
The Safe-Haven Debate: A Structural Shift, Not a One-Off
Bitcoin’s behavior during the March 2026 crisis stands in contrast to earlier geopolitical stress events. During the initial COVID shock in March 2020, Bitcoin sold off alongside equities. During Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Bitcoin briefly spiked before giving back gains within days. This time, the pattern held: BTC rose and kept rising while gold and equities fell.
The difference, analysts suggest, is the institutional infrastructure that now surrounds Bitcoin. Spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in early 2024 brought a class of longer-duration holders into the market, investors who view BTC as a portfolio allocation rather than a speculative trade. That structural shift may explain why institutional crypto platforms continue expanding their offerings even during periods of extreme market stress.
Gold at a Record, Bitcoin Still Wins the Race
Gold crossed $3,000 / oz for the first time in history in early 2025. But over the same window, Bitcoin surged from roughly $40,000 to $90,000+, more than doubling while gold gained roughly a third. Anthony Pompliano argues this divergence reflects Bitcoin’s emergence as the preferred geopolitical hedge for a new generation of global investors.
The broader market environment reinforces the stress narrative. The Fear & Greed Index sat at 11 on March 24, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory. Yet Bitcoin held above the $70,000 level even as sentiment cratered, a divergence from past cycles when extreme fear typically accompanied steep BTC drawdowns.
The Strait of Hormuz crisis remains unresolved, and oil supply disruptions continue to pressure global markets. If tensions escalate further, Bitcoin’s role as an alternative safe haven will face its most sustained test yet. Investors watching the BTC-gold ratio in the coming weeks will have a concrete measure of whether Pompliano’s thesis holds, or whether this divergence fades as geopolitical pressure normalizes.
For now, the data supports a narrower but meaningful conclusion: during the most acute geopolitical shock since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Bitcoin did not behave like a risk asset. It behaved like infrastructure that institutions are increasingly building around, not running from.
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.
