Bitcoin just broke through the $1 million mark. Over the past decade, this digital asset's annualized return far exceeds that of government bonds, enough to make any traditional financial asset pale in comparison. But this also sparks an interesting phenomenon: in 2025, institutional investors, pension funds, and sovereign wealth funds still allocate large amounts to government bonds, sometimes even selling Bitcoin to switch to bonds.
Seems contradictory, right? Actually, the logic behind it is quite clear—high returns are just numbers on paper; survival comes first.
Why are government bonds so attractive to large capital? They have a special status: the "risk-free rate" anchor in the global financial system. First, they are the safest, with almost zero default risk (unless the country goes bankrupt). For institutions managing hundreds of billions or trillions of dollars, government bonds are like a "safety cushion"—a stable place to store cash and wait for opportunities.
Now, look at Bitcoin. Although it is touted as "digital gold," in the eyes of large institutions, it is fundamentally a high-volatility risk asset. From October to December 2025, Bitcoin plummeted 36% in six weeks, evaporating hundreds of billions of dollars in market value. What does this volatility mean for those managing large funds? It means uncertainty, it means risk.
So the question isn't about the high or low yield, but about the rationality of risk pricing. The primary need of large capital has never been to get rich quickly, but to preserve principal and achieve stable growth. Government bonds offer them certainty; Bitcoin offers them possibility—each catering to different risk preferences and survival logic.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 5h ago
Basically, it's just big players backing down, seeking stability.
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GasFeeCry
· 10h ago
Staying alive is the top priority, and that's so true. Retail investors dream of getting rich quickly, while big institutions focus on stability and safety.
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SighingCashier
· 11h ago
Basically, it's just big players getting scared and sleeping soundly with something certain.
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FlashLoanPhantom
· 11h ago
Basically, it's just big players backing down. Who can withstand a 36% fluctuation?
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HorizonHunter
· 11h ago
Basically, it's the difference between a gambler's mindset and a steward's mindset. We want to get rich overnight, while they just want to sleep peacefully.
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StakeOrRegret
· 11h ago
Basically, it's just big players backing down. With such huge fluctuations, who dares to sleep peacefully?
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SerumDegen
· 11h ago
nah the 36% cascade in october was absolutely brutal to watch... institutions getting liquidated outta positions they thought were "safe" lmao. that's the real story here not the copium about "risk pricing"
Bitcoin just broke through the $1 million mark. Over the past decade, this digital asset's annualized return far exceeds that of government bonds, enough to make any traditional financial asset pale in comparison. But this also sparks an interesting phenomenon: in 2025, institutional investors, pension funds, and sovereign wealth funds still allocate large amounts to government bonds, sometimes even selling Bitcoin to switch to bonds.
Seems contradictory, right? Actually, the logic behind it is quite clear—high returns are just numbers on paper; survival comes first.
Why are government bonds so attractive to large capital? They have a special status: the "risk-free rate" anchor in the global financial system. First, they are the safest, with almost zero default risk (unless the country goes bankrupt). For institutions managing hundreds of billions or trillions of dollars, government bonds are like a "safety cushion"—a stable place to store cash and wait for opportunities.
Now, look at Bitcoin. Although it is touted as "digital gold," in the eyes of large institutions, it is fundamentally a high-volatility risk asset. From October to December 2025, Bitcoin plummeted 36% in six weeks, evaporating hundreds of billions of dollars in market value. What does this volatility mean for those managing large funds? It means uncertainty, it means risk.
So the question isn't about the high or low yield, but about the rationality of risk pricing. The primary need of large capital has never been to get rich quickly, but to preserve principal and achieve stable growth. Government bonds offer them certainty; Bitcoin offers them possibility—each catering to different risk preferences and survival logic.