Bitcoin yawns at good economic news these days, much to the dismay of investors hoping for a reaction. Remember December? Bitcoin hovered in the $80,000s while inflation cooled and the Fed signaled rate cuts. Nobody cared. The “cuts are coming” narrative that once would’ve sent prices soaring barely registered a blip. High real yields and cash crunches have changed the game.
Bitcoin’s indifference to positive economic indicators reveals a market transformed by high yields and liquidity constraints.
The truth is painful but obvious: macro factors, not adoption news, drive Bitcoin’s price movements now. Look at the data. Since 2020, Bitcoin’s correlation with the S&P 500 jumped from 0.14 to 0.38 for daily returns. During stress periods like the COVID crash? Those correlations shot above 0.4. Bitcoin follows the stock market like an obedient puppy. This pattern is particularly evident during periods of market stress, when both asset classes respond similarly to risk-off sentiment.
Bitcoin enthusiasts hate this reality. They cling to rare decoupling periods—like March 2023’s banking stress when Bitcoin gained 20.5% while the S&P limped up just 5%. Nice memory. But exceptional, not normal.
The pattern is clear as day. Pre-2020, Bitcoin often moved independently. Post-pandemic? It’s just another risk asset. When the VIX spikes, Bitcoin tanks. When stocks rise, so does Bitcoin. Central bank policies and economic crises have synchronized these markets. It’s not complicated. Unlike gold which provides ideal portfolio diversification, Bitcoin fails to effectively hedge against stock market downturns. Despite its market dominance of approximately 62.7% and $2.28 trillion capitalization, Bitcoin remains susceptible to broader market influences.
November’s CPI print told the story. Headline inflation hit 2.7%, core at 2.6%. Markets shrugged. Old news. Meanwhile, Bitcoin traded sideways between $85,500 and $90,000 for three weeks. ETF flows weakened. Investors looked at real yields, money-market conditions, and institutional positioning instead.
Good news about adoption? Doesn’t matter anymore. Negative correlation with equities might signal a rally, but those moments are increasingly rare. The 30-day correlation with the S&P 500 frequently exceeds 70% over the past five years.