JPMorgan analysts reported that momentum indicators across futures markets are sending diverging signals, with Bitcoin futures now in oversold territory, while gold and silver have moved into clearly overbought conditions.
The assessment highlights a growing imbalance between positioning and liquidity, raising near-term volatility risks even as the bank maintains a constructive long-term outlook for precious metals.
The note frames the current setup as a rotation phase rather than a broad risk-off event. While metals have absorbed strong inflows and speculative positioning, Bitcoin has seen pressure from fading momentum and stalled ETF demand, leaving futures markets stretched to the downside.
According to JPMorgan, investor behavior over recent months shows a clear preference for gold and silver over Bitcoinwithin the broader “debasement trade.” Spot Bitcoin ETF flows slowed materially toward the end of 2025 and into early 2026, with several periods of net outflows, while gold ETFs experienced a sharp resurgence in demand.
Gold ETF inflows accelerated through late 2025, pushing cumulative net inflows to nearly $60 billion by year-end, a level JPMorgan describes as historically elevated. This shift has left Bitcoin futures oversold on momentum measures, suggesting downside pressure has become increasingly driven by positioning rather than fresh fundamental deterioration.
The contrast underscores how differently the two assets are currently being used. Bitcoin has traded more like a high-beta risk asset, while gold has reasserted its role as a portfolio hedge amid uncertainty around long-duration bonds and fiscal sustainability.
Despite near-term crowding, JPMorgan maintains a structural upside scenario for gold, projecting a long-term price range of $8,000 to $8,500 per ounce. The bank emphasizes that this is not a short-term target, but a theoretical outcome based on gradual shifts in private investor allocation.
The projection assumes household gold exposure rises from just above 3% today to roughly 4.6% over the coming years, driven by continued substitution away from long-duration bonds. In this framework, gold increasingly functions as an equity hedge rather than a tactical inflation trade, supporting higher equilibrium prices over time.
JPMorgan stresses that this upside case depends on allocation trends, not speculative momentum, which is why near-term corrections do not invalidate the broader thesis.
A key element of the analysis focuses on liquidity differences across assets, measured using the Hui–Heubel ratio. Gold stands out as the deepest and most liquid market, with broad participation across physical, futures, and ETF venues. By contrast, silver and Bitcoin exhibit much thinner liquidity, making them more sensitive to relatively small order flows.
This imbalance became visible on January 30, 2026, when gold and silver experienced one of their sharpest daily corrections in decades. Silver, in particular, plunged more than 30% in a single session, a move JPMorgan attributes to crowded momentum positioning among CTAs and ETF-related flow distortions.
With momentum traders heavily involved and ETF positioning stretched, the bank warns that mean-reversion risk remains elevated in the near term, even if the longer-term structural case for gold remains constructive.
JPMorgan’s analysis paints a market divided by time horizon. Bitcoin futures appear oversold, reflecting fading momentum and positioning pressure, while gold and silver are vulnerable to short-term pullbacks after extreme crowding.
Yet beneath the volatility, the bank continues to argue that gold’s role in portfolios is structurally strengthening, supporting a much higher long-term valuation. For now, the key variable is not direction, but how quickly positioning and liquidity can normalize across these markets.
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