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Interesting take from JPMorgan analysts on something I've been thinking about. During the Iran conflict back in March, Bitcoin actually outperformed gold and silver as a safe-haven asset, which is kind of a big deal when you think about it.
The numbers tell the story - gold ETFs saw nearly $11 billion in outflows in just the first three weeks of March, and silver completely reversed its inflow momentum from the previous year. Meanwhile, Bitcoin was seeing net inflows during the same period. That's the opposite of what traditional finance would predict.
What caught my attention was the institutional positioning too. Gold and silver futures positions have been declining sharply since January, but Bitcoin futures stayed relatively stable. Even more interesting, Bitcoin's market liquidity apparently surpassed gold's at that point.
The real insight here is about how people actually use Bitcoin when things get unstable. In Iran specifically, locals were moving funds from domestic exchanges to self-custodied wallets and international platforms. Bitcoin's 24-hour trading, borderless nature, and self-custody options make it way more practical than precious metals when you're dealing with capital controls or economic pressure. Gold can't do that.
This wasn't just retail panic either - it showed up in actual capital flows and position changes. When geopolitical tensions spike, people aren't just buying Bitcoin as a store of value, they're using it as a functional tool for moving money across borders. That's a pretty different narrative than the traditional safe-haven playbook.