Bitcoin has often moved in near lock-step with Nasdaq 100 futures as markets have wobbled in the opening weeks of 2022 © FT montage/Dreamstime

Bitcoin has mirrored the sharp fluctuations in traditional markets this year, highlighting the tightening link between cryptocurrencies and mainstream financial assets as more professional traders enter the digital finance arena.

The world’s biggest cryptocurrency is increasingly tracking the movements of assets that exert influence across other global markets. Correlations with US tech stocks, crude oil and government bonds have all risen significantly over the past two years, Goldman Sachs research shows.

Bitcoin has often moved in near lock-step with Nasdaq 100 futures — derivatives that are considered a proxy for sentiment towards America’s tech giants — as markets have wobbled in the opening weeks of 2022. While the price moves in bitcoin tend to be much sharper than those of many traditional financial assets, the linkages between the two asset classes are capturing the attention of analysts and investors.

“Prior to the pandemic, bitcoin and other digital assets showed low correlations to traditional financial market variables — in effect, crypto behaved as an entirely different ecosystem,” said Zach Pandl, co-head of foreign exchange strategy at Goldman Sachs.

“But over the last two years, as bitcoin has seen wider mainstream adoption, its correlation with macro assets has picked up.”

Link between crypto and traditional markets tightens. Chart showing the correlation in prices between Bitcoin and Nasdaq 100

Fundstrat, a boutique research house that produces reports on both crypto and traditional markets, told clients earlier this week that “cryptoassets continue to exhibit a strong correlation with equities”.

The Nasdaq 100 index of the biggest companies listed on Wall Street’s tech-focused Nasdaq Composite has tumbled about 11 per cent so far this year, while bitcoin is off 18 per cent. Meanwhile, a basket of unprofitable tech stocks, which like bitcoin are considered to be speculative investments, has fallen 23 per cent.

A growing number of hedge funds now bet on cryptocurrencies, while Wall Street banks are offering their clients services like digital asset lending and custody, and high-frequency trading firms are increasingly active in the space. At the same time, big digital asset specialists like Galaxy Digital and Genesis Trading are playing a much larger role in a market that was once dominated by retail traders.

The entrance of large financial participants into the market is one of the key reasons why bitcoin is now acting more like a traditional risky asset, analysts and traders say.

Bitcoin’s emerging behaviour as an asset that investors buy when investors are taking an optimistic view of the economy or sell when they are nervous is also supported by research from Nick Metzidakis, head of quantitative research at digital asset specialist Tyr Capital.

“Over the last five years, bitcoin has . . . been positively correlated to the Nasdaq, effectively behaving like a ‘risk-on’ asset,” Metzidakis said. “That relationship has been stronger since the beginning of 2020 and suggests . . . Bitcoin is seen as a ‘risk-on’ or ‘technology play’.”

Metzidakis also found that the US jobs report, considered to be one of the most important pieces of economic data that is released each month, also affects the price of bitcoin as it does many other actively-traded assets.

Line chart of 30-day moving correlation between daily changes in bitcoin and Nasdaq 100 futures showing Bitcoin and US equities have increasingly been moving in tandem

But analysts note that bitcoin price moves are often triggered by factors specific to the crypto coin itself or the digital asset market more broadly.

Marcello Mari, the chief executive of Singularity Dao, a cryptocurrency trading firm, said the rate at which new units of bitcoin were mined, the so-called hashrate, and the amount of dollars miners held in reserves also had an impact on the exchange rate.

The influence of large holders of bitcoin, known as “whales”, is still strong, because the digital coin’s ownership is still very concentrated.

At the same time, regulation and potential shifts in financial rules across major economies have also acted as strong drivers of bitcoin’s price, noted Inigo Fraser-Jenkins, co-head of institutional solutions at AllianceBernstein. Bitcoin, for example, tumbled last May when Chinese regulators signalled a crackdown on the use of digital coins.

“At the moment there is very little empirical evidence that bitcoin can act as a diversifier of inflation or equity risk. In fact, the correlation of bitcoin to equities jumped in the early stages of Covid,” Fraser-Jenkins said.

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