Since Bitcoin reached the $100,000 mark, a question has begun to bubble up in the blogosphere and economic discourse: what is the relationship, if any, between the price of gold and Bitcoin?
I wrote code to evaluate the relationship between gold and Bitcoin prices. Using monthly price changes from January 2014 to December 2024, I first ensure the stationary of the date. The data is then split into pre- (2014–2019) and post-pandemic (2020 – present) periods for focused analysis. Granger causality tests are performed to determine whether past values of gold can help predict Bitcoin or vice versa. Correlation coefficients are then calculated to measure the strength and direction of their relationship. A Vector Autoregression (VAR) model to analyze dynamic interactions between the two assets, with Impulse Response Functions (IRFs) applied to illustrate how a shock to one variable (e.g., Bitcoin) affects the other (e.g., gold) over time, providing a detailed view of their economic interplay. The same operations are also performed on the S&P 500 and gold to provide a benchmark for comparison.
Impulse Response Function (IRF) findings:
Conclusion
With all the caveats that normally attend econometric analysis, the following can be said. In the pre-pandemic period, gold and Bitcoin exhibited little to no relationship in terms of causality or correlation, with Granger causality tests and correlation analyses showing minimal interaction. In that same time period gold maintained a modest counterbalance role against the S&P 500, consistent with its historical function as a safe-haven asset during periods of equity market stress.
The Impulse Response Function (IRF) analysis further supports this: gold shocks had limited and short-lived impacts on Bitcoin, while Bitcoin shocks caused slight, temporary fluctuations in gold. Similarly, gold’s influence on the S&P 500 was modest, with a negative but short-term impact that aligns with its role as a hedge.
Post-pandemic, gold’s relationship with Bitcoin remains weak overall, but the evidence shows hints of evolving dynamics. Correlation remains near zero, but Granger causality and IRFs suggest a slight increase in mutual influence, with Bitcoin exhibiting sharper responses to gold shocks and vice versa. Meanwhile, gold’s correlation with the S&P 500 has turned moderately positive, reflecting a shift in investor behavior where gold may have tracked broader market movements during times of economic uncertainty. The IRF results further highlight this change: post-pandemic, shocks to gold have a more pronounced and sustained impact on the S&P 500, and the S&P 500 in turn influences gold prices more significantly.
Together, the econometric findings suggest a growing interconnectedness across assets in the post-pandemic period, driven by shared macroeconomic forces and evolving investor sentiment.