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Industry Crypto Defenders Challenge Ray Dalio's Bitcoin Skepticism
The crypto community is pushing back after billionaire investor Ray Dalio reiterated his doubts about bitcoin, arguing in a recent podcast appearance that the world’s largest cryptocurrency lacks the fundamental qualities that make gold a reliable store of value. However, prominent figures in the crypto industry say Dalio’s critiques reflect outdated arguments and overlook the transformative potential of digital assets in the emerging financial ecosystem.
Speaking on the All-In Podcast, the Bridgewater Associates founder claimed bitcoin cannot be fairly compared to gold because it lacks central bank backing, offers limited privacy, and faces potential vulnerabilities from quantum computing advances. He also raised concerns about bitcoin’s transparent ledger, suggesting that transactions could be monitored or controlled. This represents a continuation of Dalio’s previous skepticism—he acknowledged last year maintaining roughly a 1% bitcoin allocation while voicing concerns about traceability and quantum threats to the digital asset.
The Opportunity Within the Obstacles
Crypto industry analysts argue that Dalio’s very concerns actually explain why bitcoin remains relatively undervalued compared to traditional assets. Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at asset manager Bitwise, told CoinDesk that the risks Dalio highlighted are precisely reflected in bitcoin’s current market positioning.
“Dalio’s not ‘wrong’ in an absolute sense,” Hougan said, acknowledging that quantum risks and limited central bank adoption do exist. “But there really is some risk with quantum and central banks really aren’t buying bitcoin yet.” However, he pointed out that bitcoin currently represents only about 4% of gold’s total market capitalization—with bitcoin’s market cap at approximately $1.41 trillion compared to gold’s estimated $35 trillion valuation.
Hougan framed this disparity as an opportunity rather than a weakness. “These criticisms are quite literally the opportunity. We invest in bitcoin because we think these things will change over time; that developers will solve quantum risk and central banks will come around.” He added provocatively: “If these critiques did not exist, bitcoin would already be at $1 million a coin.”
Crypto’s Evolution and Quantum Challenges Addressed
Alex Thorn, Galaxy’s head of research, characterized Dalio’s arguments as echoing outdated crypto skepticism from over a decade ago. “Ray Dalio’s Bitcoin critiques are reminiscent of tired narratives from the pre-2017 era,” Thorn noted in his response, emphasizing that developers are actively addressing quantum computing risks through technical innovation.
Regarding the gold comparison, Thorn argued that while both are stores of value, they serve fundamentally different purposes. “Gold might function well stored in a bunker or at the New York Fed, but Bitcoin has actual real-world utility in ways that gold could never match,” he explained, pointing to bitcoin’s nearly two-decade track record of growing adoption among both institutional and individual crypto participants.
The Broader Monetary Paradigm Shift
Matthew Sigel, head of digital assets research at VanEck, elevated the debate beyond specific critiques to frame it as a fundamental question about monetary architecture. “Both gold and bitcoin have a role as they represent hard assets from different monetary eras,” Sigel stated, emphasizing that this discussion represents a clash between “the monetary architecture of the last century and the one emerging in this one.”
According to Sigel’s analysis, gold solved the trust problem in traditional “analog” financial systems built on reported reserves and custodians. Bitcoin, by contrast, addresses trust in digital environments through open-source development and verifiable transaction verification—a model increasingly relevant as crypto infrastructure matures.
Sigel also reframed the quantum threat, arguing it’s not unique to bitcoin but rather a systemic cryptography challenge affecting the entire global financial system. “Quantum risk is a broader cryptography challenge facing the entire financial system, not a flaw unique to bitcoin,” he noted. Additionally, he highlighted that central banks—including the Czech National Bank—have begun experimenting with digital asset holdings, and that privacy improvements are emerging through evolving wallet technologies and second-layer networks.
Market Momentum and Forward Outlook
Bitcoin recently climbed above $70,000, with the cryptocurrency holding most of its gains following U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of a five-day pause on military strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure. This broader geopolitical development highlighted crypto’s sensitivity to macro events.
Across the crypto ecosystem, alternative assets showed similar strength. Ethereum, Solana, and Dogecoin each gained approximately 5%, while crypto-linked mining stocks rallied alongside broader equity markets, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each advancing roughly 1.2%.
Looking ahead, market analysts suggest bitcoin’s trajectory will depend on stabilization in oil markets and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. A stabilization scenario could support another test of the $74,000 to $76,000 range, while further deterioration could potentially pull prices back toward the mid-$60,000s. The crypto community remains confident that technological innovation and institutional adoption will ultimately vindicate their long-term positioning in digital assets despite short-term volatility and ongoing skepticism from traditional finance figures.