Retail investors have tripled their gold fund purchases over the past six months while institutional investors accelerated their selling, according to a Bank for International Settlements research paper published on March 16, 2026, highlighting a widening divergence that echoes familiar patterns across risk assets including crypto.
The BIS Quarterly Review paper, authored by Egemen Eren, Ingomar Krohn, and Karamfil Todorov, found that cumulative retail inflows into gold funds grew from roughly $20 billion to approximately $60 billion between late Q3 2025 and the end of Q1 2026. The study described retail investors as “the main source of inflows into silver and gold funds” during that period.
Gold surged approximately 60% over the course of 2025 before hitting an all-time high in late January 2026. It has since pulled back about 9% from that peak.
The BIS paper, titled “Boom and bust of the recent silver and gold rush,” characterized the dynamic as “retail-driven exuberance” channeled through exchange-traded funds that “set the stage for outsize moves.” ETF premiums over net asset value signaled “one-sided buying pressure” from retail participants, premiums that later converted to “pronounced discounts” during the reversal.
While retail buyers poured into gold funds, institutional investors moved in the opposite direction. The BIS found that institutional players “maintained stable positions or even trimmed exposure” throughout the run-up, with outright selling beginning around mid-November 2025.
That selling accelerated after the precious metals correction in January 2026. The timing coincided with shifts in U.S. monetary policy expectations and a strengthening dollar, with the DXY rising 4.7% since late January.
Silver told an even more dramatic story. After doubling across 2025 and surging over 50% in January 2026 alone, silver collapsed approximately 30% in a single late-January session. It remains roughly 34% below its January peak. Smaller speculative traders holding large long silver futures positions faced margin calls that forced rapid deleveraging.
The BIS identified leveraged ETF rebalancing mechanics as a key amplifier. The leverage rebalancing multiplier “doubled over the course of 2025,” meaning that daily rebalancing requirements for leveraged products magnified both the upswing and the subsequent crash.
The pattern the BIS documented in gold carries direct parallels for crypto markets. Retail enthusiasm meeting institutional caution is a dynamic that Bitcoin and altcoin investors have watched play out repeatedly across market cycles.
The broader risk-asset environment reinforces the comparison. Crypto market capitalization has fallen approximately 43% from its October 2025 peak. The Fear & Greed Index sits at 23, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory, as of March 19, 2026.
The BIS warning that retail herding behavior “could amplify price gyrations should fire sales occur” applies beyond precious metals. Leveraged ETF products, margin-fueled speculation, and retail-institutional positioning mismatches are structural features of crypto markets as well. The ongoing regulatory push around stablecoins and crypto market structure reflects growing awareness of these dynamics among policymakers.
Historically, sharp retail-institutional divergences in gold have preceded notable market turning points. The post-2011 gold peak saw retail investors hold positions while institutions sold, preceding a multi-year drawdown. A similar split emerged in late 2019 before the COVID-driven market disruption in early 2020.
For crypto-native investors, gold’s retail surge represents both a competing and complementary signal. Retail capital flowing aggressively into gold suggests a flight toward perceived safe-haven assets, a macro posture that has historically coincided with risk-off periods for Bitcoin and digital assets. The emergence of new crypto treasury vehicles suggests institutional players are still positioning for long-term digital asset exposure even as broader sentiment deteriorates.
The BIS, as the coordinating body for the world’s central banks, does not issue its quarterly reviews lightly. The decision to spotlight retail-driven exuberance in precious metals, and to flag leveraged ETF mechanics as systemic amplifiers, signals that global financial regulators are watching retail speculation dynamics with increasing scrutiny across asset classes.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


