Though once dancing to its own tune, Bitcoin‘s relationship with the stock market has transformed dramatically over the years. From 2017 to 2019, the cryptocurrency showed virtually zero correlation with equities. Bitcoin did its thing. Stocks did theirs. Simple as that.
But then 2020 happened. Everything changed. The COVID-19 pandemic crash brought Bitcoin and stocks together in a strange financial tango that nobody saw coming. Suddenly, correlation metrics jumped above 0.4, sometimes hitting 0.5. When stocks tanked, so did Bitcoin. When stocks rallied, Bitcoin followed suit – just more dramatically.
The pandemic revealed Bitcoin’s hidden synchronicity with equities, dancing to Wall Street’s rhythm in an amplified financial duet.
This wasn’t just a blip. The pattern stuck around, especially during market freak-outs. Take the period from July 2022 to April 2025. Bitcoin and equities moved in lockstep. Same direction, different magnitudes. Bitcoin’s wild swings – three to five times more volatile than regular stocks – turned it into a supercharged version of equity exposure. Not exactly the diversification tool many had hoped for.
Looking at the data, it’s clear: Bitcoin’s been acting like stocks on steroids. During bank stress events in early 2023, Bitcoin shot up 20.5% while the S&P 500 managed a measly 5% gain. Better, sure, but still connected. Bitcoin’s correlation with major indices has persisted for five consecutive years now. Despite this correlation, Bitcoin maintains its market dominance with approximately 62.7% of the total cryptocurrency market capitalization as of September 2025.
The culprit? Partly institutional investors. As more suits entered the Bitcoin game, they brought their macroeconomic mindset with them. Supply dynamics changed too. Long-term holders and institutions grabbed coins off exchanges, creating a market structure more attuned to traditional financial cycles. A record-breaking 90-day correlation between Bitcoin and the S&P 500 was observed in March 2022, further confirming this relationship.
Unlike gold, which tends to shine when stocks stumble, Bitcoin usually crashes alongside equities. Not exactly a safe haven, is it?
The synchronicity raises serious questions about Bitcoin’s role in investment portfolios. What was once the ultimate uncorrelated asset now moves like an equity amplifier. Great when stocks are up. Brutal when they’re not.
Bitcoin’s evolving correlation story isn’t just numbers – it’s a fundamental shift in what the asset means to investors.