Tom Lee expects Bitcoin and Ethereum to rally when gold and silver cool off

Source Cryptopolitan

Top Wall Street figure Tom Lee thinks Bitcoin and Ethereum will bounce back once gold and silver stop their current hot streak, even though digital coins have been struggling lately.

Tom Lee from Fundstrat told viewers on CNBC’s Power Lunch program Monday that the basic strengths of cryptocurrencies haven’t changed. He pointed to two factors that should help digital assets: a weaker American dollar and the Federal Reserve getting ready to ease up on tight monetary policy.

Gold and silver rally pulls investors away from crypto

But there’s a problem this time around. Lee explained that crypto markets don’t have the boost they used to get from borrowed money because the whole industry has cleaned up its debt.

“Crypto doesn’t have the leverage tailwind because the industry delevered,” Lee told the network. He said right now, people are chasing after gold and silver instead of putting money into digital currencies.

“There’s a FOMO into buying that instead of crypto,” he added. Lee believes past patterns show that when precious metals take a break from climbing, Bitcoin and Ethereum usually jump higher.

The split between metals and crypto has been clear in recent weeks. Gold reached an all-time high of $5,100 on Monday, going up about 17.5% since January started.

Silver has done even better, shooting up 57% so far this year and hitting $110.

Experts say the metal rally comes from several worries: tensions between countries, threats of new trade tariffs, and the continuing weakness of the dollar. These issues have pushed people toward old-school safe investments.

Lee said crypto is still recovering from a massive debt cleanup that happened on Oct. 10. He described that event as something that “crippled many key players” at trading platforms and among market makers.

The sector is “limping along,” he said, but the basic health of the industry has gotten much better since then.

Bitcoin struggles while institutional interest in Ethereum grows

Bitcoin hasn’t shown those improvements in its price. The biggest digital currency has dropped roughly 30% from where it stood in October. It can’t seem to get back above the $95,000 mark and has recently fallen back toward $86,000.

“The precious metal move has sucked a lot of the oxygen out of the room,” Lee said. He thinks prices aren’t matching up with fundamentals, rather than showing real problems.

Lee clearly still trusts Ethereum. On Monday, BitMine, a company focused on Ether that has ties to Lee, bought another 20,000 ETH for $58 million, based on data from blockchain tracker Lookonchain.

Lee also mentioned that recent talks at the Davos forum showed banks and financial firms are increasingly interested in building on Ethereum and similar platforms.

Not everyone agrees that a weak dollar alone will push Bitcoin higher. GugaOnChain, who analyzes data for CryptoQuant, said recent money leaving ETFs shows people still want gold when they’re worried.

“For BTC to thrive,” they said, “the weakness of the American currency must come from risk appetite, not from fear.

If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Goldman Sachs raises 2026-end gold price forecast by $500 to $5,400/ozJan 22 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs has raised its end-2026 gold price forecast to $5,400 per ounce from $4,900/oz earlier, noting private-sector and emerging market central banks' diversification into gold.Spot gold XAU= climbed to a peak of $4,887.82 per ounce on Wednesday. The safe‑haven metal h...
Author  Rachel Weiss
Jan 22, Thu
Jan 22 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs has raised its end-2026 gold price forecast to $5,400 per ounce from $4,900/oz earlier, noting private-sector and emerging market central banks' diversification into gold.Spot gold XAU= climbed to a peak of $4,887.82 per ounce on Wednesday. The safe‑haven metal h...
placeholder
Gold Hits $5,000 for First Time — Three Risks Behind the PanicGold broke through $5,000 per ounce for the first time in history. Prices have climbed more than $650 in January alone. Last week’s 8.5% gain marked the largest weekly increase ever in dollar terms. I
Author  Beincrypto
Yesterday 03: 16
Gold broke through $5,000 per ounce for the first time in history. Prices have climbed more than $650 in January alone. Last week’s 8.5% gain marked the largest weekly increase ever in dollar terms. I
placeholder
Fed Signals Rare Japanese Yen Intervention: What Does it Mean for Bitcoin?Global markets are on high alert as Japan’s yen stages its largest move in six months.The move fuels speculation that Japan, potentially with US support, may intervene to stabilize the currency.Yen In
Author  Beincrypto
Yesterday 03: 17
Global markets are on high alert as Japan’s yen stages its largest move in six months.The move fuels speculation that Japan, potentially with US support, may intervene to stabilize the currency.Yen In
placeholder
Australian Dollar slips on increased risk aversionThe Australian Dollar declines against the US Dollar (USD) after opening from a gap up on Monday. The AUD/USD pair depreciates as the Greenback gains on increased safe-haven demand, which could be attributed to the recent comments from US President Donald Trump over the weekend.
Author  Rachel Weiss
Yesterday 06: 52
The Australian Dollar declines against the US Dollar (USD) after opening from a gap up on Monday. The AUD/USD pair depreciates as the Greenback gains on increased safe-haven demand, which could be attributed to the recent comments from US President Donald Trump over the weekend.
placeholder
Top 3 Price Prediction: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple – BTC, ETH and XRP see slight recovery after recent correctionsBitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Ripple (XRP) prices recovered slightly at the time of writing on Monday after correcting by over 7%, 14%, and 7%, respectively.
Author  Rachel Weiss
Yesterday 09: 08
Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Ripple (XRP) prices recovered slightly at the time of writing on Monday after correcting by over 7%, 14%, and 7%, respectively.
goTop
quote