Crypto is becoming more correlated with stocks – and it’s your fault

Digital assets are losing their hedge advantage just as more institutional investors are entering the crypto world. In fact, allocators may be the cause.

The correlation between the price of cryptocurrencies and the stock market has increased over time, according to a recent research study from Georgetown University. The study also found that cryptoassets followed the market’s lead even more closely during periods of high market volatility, such as the Covid pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Many individual investors, market watchers and entrepreneurs have argued that cryptoassets are a safe haven given their scarcity and independence from national governments. In recent years, however, cryptocurrencies have moved in lock with shares and some critics have raised questions about whether the asset class can continue to serve as “digital gold” that protects investors in times of crisis. The new study provides further evidence that refutes the diversification benefit of crypto-assets.

The paper’s authors based their findings on an analysis of the correlation between the S&P 500 and the two largest cryptocurrencies – Bitcoin and Ether – between January 2016 and July 2022. They found that the correlation – which measures the extent to which two financial securities or instruments move together – between Bitcoin and the index were 0.08 between January 2016 and January 2021. But the correlation between the two increased to 0.33 between February 2021 and July 2022, a period of relatively high volatility. The correlation between Ether and the S&P 500 also rose from 0.04 between 2016 and 2021 to 0.38 in the most recent period. A correlation of 1 indicates that the two instruments move together.

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