Since the landmark approval of Bitcoin’s spot ETF in January 2024, the cryptocurrency’s relationship with traditional markets has undergone a dramatic transformation. Once touted as digital gold with near-zero correlation to stocks, Bitcoin now moves in lockstep with equity indices. The numbers don’t lie. Those rolling 30-day correlations with the S&P 500 have shot up, often exceeding 70% over the past five years. So much for that “uncorrelated asset” pitch crypto bros loved to make.
Bitcoin’s uncorrelated asset narrative has collapsed as institutional money transforms it into just another amplified equity play.
The institutional money has changed everything. What we’re seeing isn’t just coincidence – statistical models like DCC-GARCH confirm it’s a structural shift. The Chow Test results confirm statistically significant structural breaks in Bitcoin’s correlations with traditional assets. Remember when Bitcoin danced to its own tune before 2020? Those days are gone. Now it’s just another risk-on asset, jumping when stocks jump, falling when stocks fall.
Here’s what nobody wants to admit: those massive ETF inflows that supported Bitcoin’s price? They’ve disappeared. After raking in $53-54 billion since launch, we’re seeing $4.5 billion in outflows this year alone. That’s $3.8 billion gone in just five weeks. Not exactly a vote of confidence. Despite Bitcoin’s market capitalization around $2.28 trillion, these outflows represent a concerning trend for investors.
During market stress, Bitcoin’s true colors show. COVID-19, the 2022 bear market, and recent turbulence all reveal the same pattern – when investors get scared, Bitcoin falls with everything else. Only now, it falls harder, with volatility 3-5 times higher than equities. The high volatility of Bitcoin presents significant risks for investors seeking stability during uncertain economic times.
The ETF approval was supposed to be Bitcoin’s coming-of-age moment. Instead, it’s become more like tech stocks on steroids. That negative correlation that once made it an attractive portfolio diversifier? Gone. Now it’s approaching a correlation of 1.0 with equities – precisely the opposite of a hedge.
The hard truth: Bitcoin’s price stability was an illusion propped up by ETF inflows. With that support vanishing and correlations at all-time highs, investors expecting Bitcoin to protect them during market downturns are in for a rude awakening. The hedge is gone.