Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnBibhu PattnaikFri, July 10, 2026 at 12:22 AM GMT+2 2 min readJanuary 20, 2025. Donald Trump walks back into the White House. Bitcoin is touching $109,000. Gold is steady at $2,697 an ounce. And a meme coin bearing the president's name is a few days old and trading around $35, already down sharply from its launch peak of $74.Six months on, those three assets have gone in three completely different directions. Here is what $10,000 in each one looks like today.Bitcoin: $10,000 becomes $5,880On inauguration day, Bitcoin opened around $102,000. A $10,000 investment bought roughly 0.098 BTC. Today, with Bitcoin trading near $60,000, that position is worth approximately $5,880, a loss of just over 41%.The irony runs deep. Trump entered office as the most crypto-friendly president in U.S. history. He signed executive orders supporting the industry, established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, and pushed through the GENIUS Act for stablecoins.Bitcoin still lost nearly half its value on his watch. Rising Treasury yields, institutional profit-taking, and selling pressure tied to Strategy's $14 billion unrealized loss position have weighed heavily throughout his term.Related: SpaceX moves Bitcoin amid possible market crashGold: $10,000 becomes $15,248Gold was the quiet winner nobody put in their inauguration-day portfolio. At $2,697 per ounce on January 20, $10,000 bought 3.71 ounces. Today gold trades around $4,110, making that position worth approximately $15,248, a gain of about 52%.The driver is everything Trump's presidency brought with it: tariff wars, geopolitical tension, U.S.-Iran military strikes, and persistent inflation keeping the Fed cautious. Every time uncertainty spiked, gold climbed. The metal hit an all-time high of $5,597 in January 2026 before pulling back. For an asset dismissed as boring, it has been the standout trade of the cycle.Trending on TheStreet RoundtableDonald Trump breaks silence on $1B crypto earningsMichael Saylor reveals why Strategy sold Bitcoin and why critics are wrong