Asia Morning Briefing — Bitcoin isn’t losing to gold. It’s weathering a type of liquidity squeeze the yellow metal never had to face. The debate over whether bitcoin is “losing” to gold often gets framed as a simple price fight. Darius Sit, co-founder and managing partner at Singapore-based QCP Capital — one of Asia’s biggest trading desks with over $60 billion in annual volume — says that’s the wrong lens. Price moves matter, but liquidity and market structure matter more. “If you’re comparing Bitcoin to gold, it’s not a like-for-like comparison… you’re talking about almost like a mouse versus an elephant kind of comparison,” Sit told CoinDesk. Gold’s scale, sovereign demand and entrenched market plumbing give it a dominance bitcoin can’t match overnight. Gold’s market cap is so large that its daily swings can eclipse bitcoin’s entire valuation, turning short-term divergence into a mechanics problem rather than a narrative verdict. But the longer-term story, Sit argues, looks similar: both can act as hedges and stores of value. The bigger inflection point for crypto wasn’t bullion’s rally — it was the Oct. 10 deleveraging event, now shorthand as “10/10.” What 10/10 exposed - 10/10 drew a hard line between bitcoin and the wider crypto market by revealing stark differences in liquidity and credit handling. When leveraged positions were forced closed, books were cleared and the market’s true depth became visible. - Traditional markets have layered broker and clearinghouse structures that absorb shocks before losses hit end users. Many native crypto venues do not. They often operate as single points of failure, relying on shareholder equity, insurance funds and, in extreme cases, socialized loss. - Socialized loss — when an exchange’s insurance fund is exhausted and profitable traders’ positions are forcibly closed to cover others’ shortfalls — destroys trust. That mechanism played out on several major exchanges during Oct. 10 and left many participants believing the rules were applied inconsistently across products and counterparties. The fallout: a divided landscape - Trust in how liquidations and counterparty risk are handled has proved stickier than a temporary price drop. While leverage and volumes can recover, confidence in liquidation governance is slower to return. - Bitcoin has kept credibility because it benefits from deeper liquidity and a clearer path to being used as collateral. The wider altcoin complex, by contrast, now often trades at a structural discount driven less by macro factors and more by exchange design, order-book depth and counterparty confidence. - “When something has poor liquidity, it can go down a lot. It can go up a lot,” Sit said — underscoring why venue structure now heavily influences short-term price behavior across crypto. Market snapshot - BTC: After a liquidation-driven plunge toward $60,000, bitcoin swung violently and then climbed about 5% in the last hour. The RSI plunged to near 17 — historically an oversold reading that can precede sharp relief bounces — with price hovering in the $58,000–$60,000 support zone. - ETH: Ether traded around $1,895, rebounding roughly 7% in the past hour after a similar liquidation-fueled selloff. Volatility surged as deeply oversold momentum produced a short-term bounce despite double-digit 24-hour losses. - Gold: Gold slipped about 3.7% to roughly $4,740 per ounce amid a broad risk-asset pullback and profit-taking. Analysts still point to persistent central-bank buying, debt and currency-confidence worries, and forecasts that see potential upside toward $7,000 in 2026 despite short-term fluctuations. - Equities: The Nikkei 225 fell about 1%, extending a three-day losing streak as a tech rout from Wall Street spilled into Asia. South Korea’s Kospi dropped as much as 5%, with pressure on Hong Kong and Australian markets and a broader risk-off tone hitting silver and other volatile assets. Bottom line: bitcoin’s recent underperformance versus gold looks less like a collapse of its thesis and more like the result of structural liquidity dynamics and the lingering credibility questions that 10/10 exposed. For traders and institutions, the lesson is clear: in crypto, venue design and liquidation governance matter as much as macro narratives. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news