Bitcoin moved in tandem with US software stocks over the past week, yet NYDIG rejects claims of structural convergence. Greg Cipolaro, NYDIG’s head of research, said the rally reflects shared macro exposure rather than sector alignment. He stated that rising correlations do not prove Bitcoin tracks software equities or technology themes.
NYDIG reported that Bitcoin rallied alongside US software stocks during the recent market upswing. However, Cipolaro said observers overstated claims that Bitcoin acts as a proxy for the sector. He wrote, “While the visual fit of their indexed price is compelling, the conclusion that Bitcoin and software equities have structurally converged is overstated.”
He added that the tandem rally reflects exposure to long-duration and liquidity-sensitive assets. According to Cipolaro, current market conditions drive both assets in similar directions. Therefore, he said the move signals shared macro factors rather than common themes like artificial intelligence or quantum risk.
NYDIG data shows Bitcoin’s 90-day rolling correlation with software stocks increased after its October peak above $126,000. However, Cipolaro said correlations with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq also climbed during the same period. He explained that the broader rise indicates the shift does not center on software equities alone.
Cipolaro stated that equities explain only about 25% of Bitcoin’s price movements. He said at least 75% of movements stem from factors outside traditional stock indices. “The majority of BTC’s price movement remains unexplained by equities,” he wrote in the research note.
He also addressed claims that Bitcoin acts as a hedge during macro stress. Cipolaro said traders allocate capital along a risk curve instead of following a distinct monetary thesis. As a result, Bitcoin has not behaved like gold despite its digital gold label.
NYDIG maintained that Bitcoin retains unique economic and market features. Cipolaro pointed to network activity, adoption trends, and regulatory developments as distinct drivers. He said these elements separate Bitcoin from traditional equities and technology stocks.
He concluded that elevated cross-asset correlations remain far from determinative of returns. “That differentiation supports bitcoin’s role as a portfolio diversifier,” Cipolaro stated. He emphasized that current correlations do not define Bitcoin’s long-term performance drivers.
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