Data shows liquidity and volatility steering Bitcoin's link to SaaS stocks; analysts cite Bitcoin decoupling, dead cat bounce, SaaS and tech stock correlation.Data shows liquidity and volatility steering Bitcoin's link to SaaS stocks; analysts cite Bitcoin decoupling, dead cat bounce, SaaS and tech stock correlation.

Bitcoin tests decoupling from SaaS stocks as liquidity thins

2026/03/05 12:14
3 min read
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Bitcoin tests decoupling from SaaS stocks as liquidity thins

Key Takeaways:

  • Bitcoin still tracks U.S. SaaS stocks; durable decoupling hasn’t occurred.
  • Decoupling requires persistently low or negative correlations across market regimes.
  • Beware dead cat bounces during fragile risk sentiment and broader downtrends.

Bitcoin’s relationship to U.S. software-as-a-service equities is under renewed scrutiny. The central question is whether the asset still trades as a high-beta extension of growth software names or has begun to diverge in a durable way.

In this context, decoupling means persistently low or negative correlations across market regimes, not just brief divergences. A “dead cat bounce” refers to a short-lived recovery within a broader downtrend, often seen when risk sentiment remains fragile.

Recent institutional research points to elevated co-movement between Bitcoin and software-heavy tech benchmarks. The evidence below suggests decoupling has not yet been established on a sustained basis.

According to ByteTree, Bitcoin’s multi-year correlation with the iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF (IGV) has hovered around 0.73, with the report characterizing Bitcoin as behaving like an “internet stock.” That level of overlap implies sector rotations in software can transmit meaningfully into crypto prices.

Deutsche Bank analysts have noted that a sharp late-2025 selloff saw correlations with U.S. equity indexes rise to stress-era levels, with Bitcoin acting like high-beta tech amid elevated volatility and thinner liquidity. The analysis indicates that when risk aversion intensifies, Bitcoin’s equity-like behavior can amplify drawdowns.

As reported by Citi, equities remain the macro driver most strongly correlated with Bitcoin in the current regime, even if that linkage may weaken over time. This framing suggests equity weakness can still weigh on crypto until structural drivers broaden and mature.

Marcin Kazmierczak, co-founder and COO at RedStone Oracles, has emphasized that Bitcoin is still maturing and presently functions more as a portfolio diversifier than a consistent safe haven during volatility. Under stressed conditions, that positioning can limit defensive qualities relative to traditional hedges.

“Bitcoin is not yet decoupled from U.S. SaaS tech companies; beware of a ‘dead cat bounce,’” said Arthur Hayes, co-founder and former CEO of BitMEX. The warning aligns with the institutional view that correlations can spike when liquidity tightens or when tech sentiment deteriorates.

Taken together, the evidence supports a regime-dependent correlation: during stress, Bitcoin has tended to move with growth tech; in calmer periods, the relationship can loosen. If SaaS multiples compress further, Bitcoin may remain exposed; if software stabilizes, the correlation could moderate but not disappear immediately.

At the time of this writing, Bitcoin trades near $72,498. The dataset shows an RSI of 46.14 and medium volatility around 4.50%. The 50-day and 200-day simple moving averages stand near 77,048 and 96,782, respectively. The same dataset records 12 of the past 30 sessions as green (40%) and a Bearish sentiment label.

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