Bitcoin's recent parallel movement with US software stocks is attributed to shared exposure to macroeconomic events rather than structural convergence, according to Cointelegraph. Financial services company NYDIG highlighted this observation, noting that Bitcoin (BTC) rallied alongside US software stocks in the past week. Greg Cipolaro, head of research at NYDIG, emphasized in a note on Friday that while the indexed price movement of Bitcoin and software equities appears compelling, the notion of structural convergence or shared exposure to themes like AI or quantum risk is overstated.
Cipolaro further explained that the tandem rally more plausibly reflects shared exposure to the current macro regime, particularly long-duration, liquidity-sensitive risk assets, rather than evidence of structural convergence between Bitcoin and software equities. Despite Bitcoin's increased correlation with software stocks on a 90-day rolling basis since its all-time high above $126,000 in early October, Cipolaro noted that correlations with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have also risen, indicating that the change is not isolated to software stocks. However, he pointed out that the majority of Bitcoin's price movement remains unexplained by equities.
Statistically, only a quarter of Bitcoin's price movements are explained by correlation to the stock market, while at least 75% are influenced by factors outside traditional stock indices. Cipolaro remarked that Bitcoin is not being priced as a hedge against macroeconomic conditions, which explains the ongoing frustration around Bitcoin's failure to act like gold despite its digital gold label. Traders appear to be allocating assets along a risk curve rather than buying Bitcoin for a distinct monetary thesis.
Cipolaro argued that Bitcoin possesses a distinct market structure and economic drivers, citing its network activity, adoption trends, and regulatory and policy developments that differentiate it from other assets. This differentiation supports Bitcoin's role as a portfolio diversifier. While cross-asset correlations with equities are currently elevated, they remain far from determinative of Bitcoin's returns.