For two and a half years, the debasement trade worked perfectly. Buy gold. Buy silver. Buy Bitcoin. Watch all three rally as global central banks bought bullion, US fiscal deficits expanded, inflation refused to return to target, and currencies looked increasingly vulnerable to monetary policy convenience. The strategy delivered some of the best returns in modern markets.
Gold climbed from $1,820 in January 2023 to a peak of $5,600 in January 2026. Silver rallied from $24 to over $120. Bitcoin reached $126,200 in October 2025. The combined performance vindicated decades of warnings from gold bugs about fiat currency debasement. The thesis felt structural rather than cyclical.
Then 2026 happened.
Gold broke below $4,000 per ounce yesterday for the first time since November 2025. The decline represents a 28% drawdown from the January peak. Silver dropped more than 50% from its record high near $120, now trading below $60. Bitcoin sits at $61,000, down 50% from its October all-time high. The three assets that were supposed to protect against currency debasement are now the three worst-performing major asset categories of 2026.
The reason can be traced to one specific person. Kevin Warsh’s appointment as Federal Reserve Chair has fundamentally disrupted the political and economic assumptions that supported the debasement trade for two years. His first FOMC meeting on June 17 delivered the most hawkish policy positioning in years. The May PCE inflation reading of 4.1% confirmed his message. Markets now price in two to three Federal Reserve rate hikes by early 2027, replacing earlier expectations of monetary easing.
For investors who positioned heavily in the debasement trade through 2024 and 2025, the unwinding has been painful. For investors who avoided the trade, the breakdown provides validation. For the broader question of what comes next in macro positioning, the gold breakdown matters more than any individual price level.
What Specifically Changed
The trajectory of the debasement trade unwinding can be traced through specific events that systematically broke the structural assumptions.
The Warsh appointment on January 30, 2026 marked the first major break. President Trump nominated Warsh as Fed Chair despite his reputation as an inflation hawk. Markets immediately repriced for a Fed that would prioritize price stability over accommodating government borrowing needs. Gold dropped 13% in a single day from its all-time high, the steepest decline in more than four decades. Bitcoin’s decline followed.
The dollar found a bottom after a prolonged decline. The US Dollar Index has rallied from year-end 2025 levels through 2026, currently sitting above 101 at a 13-month high. The dollar strength reflects renewed institutional confidence in US monetary policy combined with relative economic strength compared to other major economies. AI-driven productivity gains and US energy independence have provided fundamental support that pure monetary models didn’t anticipate.
The June 17 FOMC meeting under Warsh’s chairmanship delivered the hawkish positioning that markets had been positioning for. The median dot plot shifted from showing one rate cut by year-end to showing the federal funds rate target at 3.75-4.00%. Nine of eighteen FOMC officials projected at least one rate hike before year-end 2026. Warsh removed easing language from the policy statement entirely.
The May PCE inflation reading of 4.1% confirmed the Fed’s positioning. Core PCE at 3.4% year-over-year showed that inflation pressures haven’t moderated meaningfully despite restrictive policy. Bank of America responded by revising its forecast from no rate changes to three rate hikes during 2026.
The combined effect has produced exactly the conditions that historically pressure debasement-trade assets. Higher real interest rates increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. A stronger dollar mechanically pressures dollar-denominated commodities. Investor positioning that built up during the bull market has been unwinding as the macro environment shifts.
What the Bears Are Missing
Despite the dramatic price action, several factors suggest the structural debasement case hasn’t actually been resolved.
US fiscal deficit dynamics remain unchanged. The federal deficit continues running at approximately 6% of GDP, well above historical norms during periods of full employment. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s stated goal of cutting the deficit in half by the end of Trump’s term hasn’t begun translating into actual fiscal restraint. The structural fiscal imbalance that motivated debasement-trade positioning still exists.
Inflation remains structurally elevated. PCE at 4.1% year-over-year is double the Fed’s 2% target. Multiple years of inflation running above target have eroded the credibility of the inflation framework. Even with hawkish Fed positioning, getting back to 2% inflation requires either deeper economic damage or more aggressive policy than the Fed has signaled it’s prepared to deliver.
The Fed’s actual capacity to deliver Volcker-era tightening doesn’t exist. The federal funds rate at 3.75-4.00% (where it would sit after the projected 2026 hikes) remains well below the levels required to outpace 3.8-4.1% inflation. Real interest rates that would actually break the structural debasement case would require much more aggressive tightening than the current path implies. The Fed is signaling hawkishness it cannot fully execute without breaking the housing market or Treasury market.
Central banks continue buying gold. China just posted its highest monthly gold imports since March 2024. Other central banks including India, Turkey, and various Eastern European nations continue accumulating bullion. The structural sovereign bid for gold remains intact even as speculative positioning has unwound.
Gold ETFs just snapped a four-week outflow streak. The latest weekly inflow was the strongest since mid-April. Major banks including Standard Chartered still project gold at $5,100 per ounce by mid-2027. The institutional positioning that supports gold longer-term hasn’t fully reversed despite the price decline.
The debasement trade isn’t dead. It’s been recalibrated. The assumption that monetary debasement would continue producing easy gains regardless of central bank positioning has proven wrong. But the underlying structural case for protecting wealth against currency debasement remains substantially intact.
What This Means for Bitcoin
Bitcoin’s position within the broader debasement trade story has been more complicated than gold’s.
Bitcoin began 2025 trading around $100,000, then largely stagnated through the year while gold and silver rallied. The divergence raised questions about whether Bitcoin still belonged in the debasement trade category. Some institutional investors began treating Bitcoin as a higher-beta risk asset rather than a debasement hedge. The October 2025 peak at $126,200 represented modest gains compared to gold’s 175% rally from 2023.
The 2026 decline has accelerated. Bitcoin at $61,000 represents a 50% drawdown from the October peak. The asset is trading below its 200-week moving average of approximately $62,800. The 200-week SMA has marked the exact bottom of every major Bitcoin bear market since 2018. A sustained break below it would represent a meaningful structural break.
Within the debasement trade context, Bitcoin has actually outperformed both gold and silver since the ratio bottoms in February. BTC has gained roughly 30% against gold and 55% against silver. The relative outperformance suggests Bitcoin’s positioning within debasement trade portfolios has been improving even as absolute prices have declined.
For Bitcoin specifically, the debasement trade unwind has been compounded by additional factors that don’t affect gold. Spot Bitcoin ETF outflows have been substantial. Strategy’s STRC preferred stock concerns have weighed on the corporate Bitcoin treasury thesis. Competition from Solana and Ethereum’s various challenges have created crypto-specific headwinds beyond the macro debasement pressure.
The question for Bitcoin investors is whether the 200-week SMA holds as it has during every previous bear market bottom. If it does, the cycle low forms here or slightly below current levels, and the recovery thesis remains intact despite the debasement trade complications. If it breaks, the entire framework for understanding Bitcoin cycles needs reconstruction.
Three Scenarios From Here
The combination of broken debasement positioning and persistent structural factors creates three plausible scenarios for how the macro picture evolves.
Scenario 1: Fed pivot eventually arrives. Inflation moderates over the next 6-12 months despite the hawkish positioning. The Fed pivots toward easing by mid-2027. Gold, Bitcoin, and silver all recover as real interest rates fall and dollar strength reverses. The debasement trade resumes from much better entry points than the 2025 peak. Standard Chartered’s $5,100 gold target and various Bitcoin recovery scenarios materialise.
Scenario 2: Stagflation extends. Inflation remains elevated. The Fed maintains hawkish positioning. Economic growth slows but doesn’t enter recession. Gold and Bitcoin stay range-bound below their 2025 peaks for an extended period. The debasement thesis remains valid but the assets don’t deliver the easy gains that 2024-2025 produced. Investors learn to live with sustained macro uncertainty.
Scenario 3: Genuine fiscal crisis. Government borrowing creates Treasury market disruption. Bond yields spike beyond what the economy can absorb. The Fed faces difficult choices between supporting markets and maintaining inflation discipline. Gold and Bitcoin both rally aggressively as ultimate stores of value during financial system stress. The scenario most debasement trade advocates have always argued was the eventual destination.
The probability weights are difficult to assess precisely. Scenario 2 is probably the base case for the next 12-18 months. Scenarios 1 and 3 carry meaningful probability but require specific catalysts to materialise. Investors positioning around the debasement trade today need to be honest about which scenario they’re betting on rather than assuming the easy gains of 2024-2025 will simply resume.
For investors who exited debasement positions during the breakdown, the question is when and how to re-enter. The structural case remains intact. The cyclical positioning has been cleansed. The combination historically has produced attractive entry conditions, though timing the actual bottom is genuinely difficult.
For investors who maintained debasement positions through the unwinding, the situation tests conviction in fundamental ways. Painful drawdowns from peak levels don’t invalidate the long-term thesis but do require patience that many investors lack. Distinguishing between cyclical correction and structural break is the central analytical challenge.
The debasement trade isn’t over. It’s been disrupted by Kevin Warsh’s appointment and the macro implications of his hawkish positioning. Whether the disruption proves temporary or permanent depends on factors that the next year of monetary policy and fiscal developments will reveal. Gold breaking $4,000 is significant. It’s also not the end of the story.
FAQ
Why did gold break below $4,000?
Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh’s hawkish positioning has fundamentally disrupted the assumptions that supported the debasement trade. The June 17 FOMC meeting delivered the most hawkish dot plot in years, with 9 of 18 officials projecting at least one rate hike in 2026. The May PCE inflation reading of 4.1% confirmed inflation pressures haven’t moderated. Bank of America now expects three Federal Reserve rate hikes this year, replacing earlier expectations of monetary easing. The US Dollar Index has rallied to a 13-month high at 101.52, mechanically pressuring all dollar-denominated commodities.
Is the debasement trade really over?
No, but it’s been significantly disrupted. The structural factors that motivated debasement-trade positioning (US fiscal deficits at 6% of GDP, persistent inflation, central bank gold buying) remain in place. China just posted its highest monthly gold imports since March 2024. Gold ETFs snapped a four-week outflow streak. Standard Chartered still projects gold at $5,100 per ounce by mid-2027. The cyclical positioning that built up during 2024-2025 has unwound, but the underlying structural case for protecting wealth against currency debasement remains substantially intact.
What does this mean for Bitcoin?
Bitcoin at $61,000 is now testing its 200-week moving average of approximately $62,800. This indicator has marked the exact bottom of every major Bitcoin bear market since 2018. A sustained hold above the 200-week SMA would suggest the bear cycle is bottoming. A sustained break below would represent a meaningful structural break. Bitcoin has actually outperformed both gold and silver since February (gaining 30% against gold and 55% against silver), suggesting its relative positioning within debasement portfolios has improved even as absolute prices declined.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















