An Uncanny Correlation
The global crypto market lately fell and recovered in tandem with the US stock market. A study conducted by Binance cryptocurrency exchange that leading token Bitcoin formed a modest positive correlation with the stock market in the first quarter. Excerpts:“In the first quarter of 2020, the bitcoin price was down by 10 percent, while the S&P 500 displayed a [negated] 19 percent return. Their correlation was relatively high (0.57), which is explained by a similar pattern in daily business day returns.”
The uncanny resemblance in the moves of bitcoin and S&P 500 became sharper against the backdrop of COVID-19. The fast-spreading novel Coronavirus forced businesses to either shut down or go on an overstretched loss-making standby, causing mass layoffs in the US.
Something to keep in mind as joblessness surges, as we debate how aggressively the U.S. should try to get companies to maintain payrolls: People are incredibly resilient to negative life events, like widowhood. But they are uniquely "un-resilient" to long-term unemployment. — Derek Thompson (@DKThomp)
Still, the US market rebounded, helped by the Federal Reserve’s efforts to stabilize market with additional liquidity. Many believe the crypto market’s 90 percent recovery also took cues from the US central bank’s stimulus program. Additionally, the US Congress’ decision to inject $2 trillion into the economy also led investors to pump both traditional and crypto-assets.
Crypto Market at Risk
But for Mr. Minerd, the said recovery smell like instability. In his , the financial expert treated COVID-19 as a major bearish influencer that could drive the markets further downwards in the near future.“When the markets start to see some of the data on unemployment rising and economic growth and corporate earnings contracting, there will be another level of panic in the market,” Mr. Minerd wrote.If crypto tokens like , they could also follow them to their year-to-date bottoms. That is because they are still sitting on better profits than their traditional counterparts. Investors seeking maximum cash liquidity to offset their losses in equities would most likely sell a profitable bitcoin at its top than an underperforming traditional asset.
Veteran investor Raoul Pal believes the crypto market’s correlation with stocks would grow, for investors will use the offbeat assets for liquidity – “the puking of risk assets.”
but hedge funds, family offices and anyone buying bitcoin on margin. Once this phase of the markets is over (which I think comes in the next couple of weeks or so), it should stabilise and begin its rise again, free of excessive longs with just HODLR's remaining in, as ever. — Raoul Pal (@RaoulGMI)The sum of all predictions spells troubling times for the crypto market ahead, even though it has attracted about $90 billion since bottoming out in March.