Bitcoin is ‘not immune’ from stock market volatility (Cryptocurrency:BTC-USD)
, 2022-05-14 10:23:00,
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Bitcoin (BTC-USD) has often been hyped as an inflation hedge or as an alternative investing class, an opportunity to diversify a portfolio. However, evidence continues to mount, especially in the recent market downturn, that crypto holds a high correlation with stocks (SP500).
This connection is evidenced by the fact that both bitcoin and equities grinded higher in the easy money era of 2020-2021, and now both are facing cyclical downturns as financial conditions tighten and liquidity dries up.
“The correlation between bitcoin and equity indices has remained high and will continue to do so unless bitcoin becomes widely used as a medium of payment – which looks unlikely to happen soon,” Morgan Stanley analyst Sheena Shah wrote in a note May 10.
For some context, the rolling 120-day correlation between the S&P 500 index (SP500) and bitcoin (BTC-USD) was recently standing at 0.60, the highest reading since the series began in 2011, Charles Schwab Chief Investment Strategist Liz Ann Sonders wrote in a Twitter post May 10. In other words, bitcoin’s price action resembles that of stocks and therefore risk assets. Take a look at the chart below to further grasp how bitcoin has fared Y/Y with the S&P 500 as well as S&P volatility, which is inversely correlated with the major stock index.
For a macro perspective, as central banks across the globe pivot to tighter monetary policy (some more aggressive than others) in an effort to dull widespread inflationary pressures, global money supply growth continues to decelerate from its peak in Feb. 2021, Shah noted, adding that bitcoin’s (BTC-USD) market cap growth topped a month later in March 2021, implying that global liquidity and bitcoin could share a connection.
Note that in 2020,…
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