Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Futures Kickoff
Get prepared for your futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to experience risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Roubini's Case Against Cryptocurrencies: Market Realities vs. Promises
Nouriel Roubini, the economist known as “Dr. Doom,” has articulated a stark assessment of the digital asset landscape, arguing that cryptocurrencies face an inevitable collapse despite favorable political conditions. His analysis centers on a fundamental contradiction: even with a government administration perceived as crypto-friendly, the sector has failed to deliver on its promises, revealing what he contends are inherent structural weaknesses.
The Broken Pro-Crypto Dream: Market Performance vs. Expectations
A year ago, cryptocurrency advocates anticipated a transformative period. The incoming administration’s deregulation agenda fueled optimistic forecasts, with some predicting Bitcoin could reach $200,000. The outcome, however, diverged sharply from these projections. The market has experienced significant contraction despite policy-level support efforts. As of recent months, Bitcoin has declined approximately 35% from its October 2025 peak, reaching levels not seen since late 2024. Current data shows Bitcoin trading around $66,830, with modest 24-hour gains of 4.96%, demonstrating the volatile and uncertain sentiment surrounding the asset.
This underperformance raises a critical question: if a supportive political environment cannot catalyze sustained growth, what structural factors are restraining the sector’s expansion?
Bitcoin as Digital Gold: A Flawed Narrative Under Pressure
The comparison between Bitcoin and gold reveals a striking divergence in their roles as value stores. Over the past year, geopolitical tensions, trade disputes, and fiscal challenges have propelled gold prices upward by over 60%. Simultaneously, Bitcoin has moved in the opposite direction, declining roughly 6% across the same period.
Roubini emphasizes this inverse correlation as evidence that cryptocurrencies fail to function as reliable hedges. He observes that “every time gold has spiked in response to trade or geopolitical turbulence over the past year, Bitcoin has fallen sharply,” suggesting that digital assets amplify risk rather than mitigate it. This pattern undermines the long-standing assertion that cryptocurrencies possess the stabilizing characteristics attributed to traditional safe-haven assets.
Furthermore, Roubini contends that the entire framework for characterizing crypto as currency is fundamentally flawed. By this analysis, digital assets fail to satisfy the three core functions of money: serving as a unit of account, functioning as a medium of exchange, or maintaining stable purchasing power as a store of value.
DeFi’s Scalability Problem and Cryptocurrencies’ Limited Real-World Use Cases
After 17 years of development, Roubini argues that the cryptocurrency ecosystem has produced only one genuinely functional innovation: stablecoins. This narrow practical achievement suggests that the sector’s broader ambitions remain unfulfilled.
Regarding decentralized finance (DeFi), Roubini presents a structural constraint that may prove insurmountable. True DeFi systems require anonymity to function, yet no sovereign government will permit the opacity necessary for such systems to operate at scale—particularly given their vulnerability to criminal exploitation. This regulatory reality creates an inherent contradiction: the features that define decentralized finance are precisely those that governments will actively prevent.
What’s Next: Traditional Systems vs. Decentralized Alternatives
Looking forward, Roubini predicts that the evolution of monetary systems will follow an incremental path rather than a revolutionary one. The future of money, he suggests, lies in the gradual modernization of traditional ledger systems and banking infrastructure. These established institutions, reformed through technological improvement and regulatory refinement, will likely dominate rather than be displaced by cryptocurrencies.
This perspective suggests that while blockchain technology may find niche applications, the broader cryptocurrency vision—displacing fiat systems through decentralized alternatives—faces formidable headwinds. The combination of regulatory opposition, technical limitations, and the demonstrated inadequacy of cryptocurrencies as functional currency presents a structural challenge to the sector’s expansionist narrative.