Ray Dalio cast fresh doubt on Bitcoinβs claim to safe-haven status on Tuesday, arguing that the asset still falls short of gold on privacy, institutional suitability and market structure. In a March 3 appearance on the All-In podcast, the billionaire hedge fund founder said those weaknesses help explain why Bitcoin has not behaved like gold during the current macro cycle.
Asked why Bitcoin has lagged while gold has surged, Dalio pointed first to surveillance and control. βBitcoin does not have privacy. Any transactions can be monitored and then indirectly perhaps controlled,β he said. He then drew a line from that feature to state-level adoption. βCentral banks are not going to want to buy bitcoin and be able to hold it. So, itβs not just individuals, itβs institutions and so on, but most, you know, and central banks.β
That matters because Dalioβs broader framework in the interview was built around debt stress, monetary debasement and the search for what he sees as politically neutral reserve assets. In that setup, gold remains the benchmark. He described it not as a speculative commodity, but as βthe most established moneyβ and βthe second largest reserve currency that central banks hold,β arguing that its role is rooted in transferability, scarcity and the fact that it is not someone elseβs liability.
Bitcoin, in Dalioβs telling, still looks different. Beyond privacy, he flagged technological uncertainty and the nature of its investor base. βThere have been some questions or thoughts of the development of new technologies like quantum computing and so on. Can there be issues regarding that,β he said. βAnd then thereβs who owns it and what are the other exposures that they have in their portfolio? It tends to have a pretty high correlation with the tech stocks.β
That last point goes to Dalioβs bigger criticism: Bitcoin may be treated as an alternative monetary asset in theory, but in practice it still trades like a risk asset. βIf somebody gets squeezed in one thing, they sell something, whatever else they have,β he said, arguing that Bitcoinβs supply-demand dynamics are shaped by cross-portfolio stress in a way golds are not. He also called it βa relatively small marketβ and, for that reason, βa relatively controllable market.β
Ray Dalio SLAMS Bitcoin!!
βBitcoin does not have privacy.β βCentral banks are not gonna wanna buy Bitcoin.β βQuantum computingβ βWho owns it?β
What do you think? pic.twitter.com/NdleeHR5lB
β Altcoin Daily (@AltcoinDaily) March 3, 2026
Bitcoin Community Reacts
The remarks quickly drew pushback from Bitcoin advocates on X, where the debate centered less on Dalioβs macro framing than on whether he was underestimating Bitcoinβs long-term trajectory. Investor Vijay Boyapati argued that Dalio βdoesnβt fully understand why central banks own gold,β saying those holdings exist partly as protection against the possibility that gold competes with sovereign currencies.
βOnce Bitcoin achieves the same scale as gold (it will over time based on its significant comparative advantages over gold) central banks will be forced to own it for the same reason they own golf. Without ownership their national currency becomes vulnerable to a speculative attack from Bitcoin,β he added.
Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan took a more market-oriented angle: βSome hear criticism; I hear opportunity. These are the reasons bitcoin is 4% of the size of gold. If these critiques did not exist, bitcoin would already be ~$750,000/coin. I invest in bitcoin in part because I am confident these things will change over time.β
Abra CEO Bill Barhydt argued that Bitcoinβs volatility and smaller float are features of a younger monetary asset, not proof of failure, while also disputing the severity of Dalioβs quantum concerns.
Iβd like to address this conversation between two people I greatly admire (@friedberg and @RayDalio) as both fellow libertarians and macro experts i try to learn from. The conversation in the video is about bitcoin but Iβve extended it to be about bitcoin vs gold. Note thatβ¦ https://t.co/atznXiMdTy
β Bill Barhydt (@billbar) March 3, 2026
Zcash founder Zooko Wilcox, meanwhile, responded with a one-line jab: βIβm looking forward to Ray Dalio finding out about Zcash.β
At press time, BTC traded at $69,660.

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