But i have to agree that BTC grows when large geopolitical events occur and will do so .
Oil and Twitter (the stock) is more volatile than Bitcoin.
Forbes is trying to wrap their ossifying grey matter around the idea of cryptocurrencies, but they can't find a convenient box to put it in.
Digital scarcity of an asset that is essentially a "Digital Bearer Bond" has utility beyond a physically cumbersome dinosaur coin/bars/ingots. What I personally find hilarious is that even with the sabre-rattling of the Soviet Union and North Korea, Gold can't even manage a rally to $2,000 - its been languishing for quite some time. Pathetic.
The strength of gold is in inverse relationship with the strength of the American dollar. Gold was spiking in 2011 when the Federal Reserve ran its quantitative easings and people expected a dollar inflation of magnificent scale to arrive soon. It didn't happen and then gold plunged something like 40%. In this way, don't expect that gold will skyrocket in the future unless the dollar depreciates really strong.