Data shows the Bitcoin correlation to the Nasdaq has continued to be negative since December. Here’s what this means for the cryptocurrency.
In a new post on X, the analytics firm Kaiko has discussed what the trend in the correlation between BTC and Nasdaq has looked like recently. The “correlation” here refers to a metric that keeps track of how tied together the prices of two commodities have been over a given period.
This period can naturally be of any length, but in the context of the current topic, the 60-day correlation is of interest. This indicator version measures the prices’ dependence on each other during the past two months.
When the value of this metric is greater than zero, it means that the price of one asset has been reacting to the other by moving in the same direction. The closer the indicator is to one, the stronger this relationship.
On the other hand, values under zero suggest some correlation between the two assets, but it has been a negative one. This means that the assets have reacted to each other by moving in the opposite direction. In this case, the extreme point is -1, so the closer the indicator is to this mark, the stronger the correlation between the prices.
Lastly, the correlation being exactly zero implies that there is no correlation whatsoever between the two assets. In mathematics, such a condition occurs when two variables are independent.
Now, here is a chart that shows the trend in the 60-day correlation between Bitcoin and Nasdaq 100 over the past year:
As the above graph shows, the 60-day correlation between Bitcoin and Nasdaq is shown in percentage here, with 100% corresponding to a value of 1.
From the chart, it’s apparent that the metric’s value was in a state of overall gradual decline during 2023, up until the final couple of months of the year, when the metric took an especially sharp dive.
Some amount of positive correlation had existed between the two assets before this plummet, but following it, the 60-day correlation took to negative values. However, the indicator remained close to the 0% mark, implying that the two only had a slight negative relationship.
The correlation had started surging and reached almost exactly 0% for a brief period just earlier, but the metric has since again come down and assumed slight negative values.
It would appear that BTC has kicked off 2024 slightly, moving against the traditional markets, which could set the stage for the cryptocurrency to go on and explore its territories this year.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around the $44,800 mark, up over 5% over the past week.
[#item_full_content]NewsBTCRead MoreRegulators in Washington on Thursday cleared a major step that lets Americans trade spot Bitcoin…
Bitcoin is again trading under the shadow of a potential yen carry-trade shock as markets…
The one-month chart shows BTC still locked inside a descending structure from early November’s highs,…
On-chain analytics firm Glassnode has pointed out how the current Bitcoin market is reminiscent to…
A softer inflation report could lower the 10-year Treasury yield and support cryptocurrencies.Read MoreCoinDesk: Bitcoin,…
Spot XRP ETFs have now attracted nearly $850 million in inflows since launching in mid-November…