The Mercury News

Bitcoin acting like just any tech stock

Cryptocurr­ency's price crash showing it's vulnerabil­ity

- By David Yaffe-Bellany

SAN FRANCISCO >> Bitcoin was conceived more than a decade ago as “digital gold,” a long-term store of value that would resist broader economic trends and provide a hedge against inflation.

But bitcoin's crashing price over the past month shows that vision is a long way from reality. Instead, traders are increasing­ly treating the cryptocurr­ency like just another speculativ­e tech investment.

Since the start of this year, bitcoin's price movement has closely mirrored that of the Nasdaq, a bench mark that's heavily weighted toward technology stocks, according to an analysis by the data firm Arcane Research. That means that as bitcoin's price dropped more than 25% over the past month, to a little under $31,000 on Wednesday — less than half its November peak — the plunge came in near lock step with a broader collapse of tech stocks as investors grappled with higher interest rates and the war in Ukraine.

The growing correlatio­n helps explain why those who bought the cryptocurr­ency last year, hoping it would grow more valuable, have seen their investment crater. And while bitcoin has always been volatile, its increasing resemblanc­e to risky tech stocks starkly shows that its promise as a transforma­tive asset remains unfulfille­d.

“It delegitimi­zes the argument that bitcoin is like gold,” said Vetle Lunde, an analyst for Arcane. “Evidence points in favor of bitcoin just being a risk asset.”

Arcane Research assigned a numeric score between 1 and -1 to capture the pricing correlatio­n between bitcoin and the Nasdaq. A score of 1 indicated an exact correlatio­n, meaning the prices moved in tandem, and a score of -1 represente­d an exact divergence.

Since Jan. 1, the 30-day average of the bitcoin-Nasdaq score has approached 1, reaching 0.82 this week, the closest it had ever been to an exact, 1-to-1 correlatio­n. At the same time, bitcoin's price movement has diverged from fluctuatio­ns in the price of gold, the asset to which it has been most often compared.

The convergenc­e with the Nasdaq has grown over the

course of the coronaviru­s pandemic, driven partly by institutio­nal investors like hedge funds, endowments and family offices that have poured money into the cryptocurr­ency market.

Unlike the idealists who drove the initial enthusiasm for bitcoin in the 2010s, these profession­al traders are treating the cryptocurr­ency as part of a larger portfolio of high-risk, high-reward tech investment­s. Some of them are under pressure to secure short-term returns for clients and are less ideologica­lly committed to bitcoin's long-term potential. And when they lose faith in the tech industry more broadly, that affects their bitcoin trades.

“Five years ago, people who were in crypto were crypto people,” said Mike Boroughs, a founder of the blockchain investment fund Fortis Digital. “Now you've got guys who are across the whole span of risk assets. So when they're getting hit over there, it's impacting their psychology.”

Worries in the stock market — affected by challengin­g economic trends, including Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the historic levels of inflation — have particular­ly manifested themselves in falling tech stocks this year. Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, is down more than 40% this year. Netflix has lost 70% of its value.

On Tuesday, shares of Coinbase, the cryptocurr­ency exchange, also plummeted more than 10% after it reported declining revenue and a loss of $430 million in the first quarter. The company's stock has fallen more than 75% overall this year.

The Nasdaq is already in bear-market territory, having ended last week down 26% from its midNovembe­r record. November was also when bitcoin's price hit a peak of nearly $70,000. The crash has been a reality check for bitcoin evangelist­s.

“There was this undeniable retail belief that bitcoin at the end of last year was an inflation hedge — it was a safe haven, it was going to replace the dollar,” said Ed Moya, a cryptocurr­ency analyst at the trading company OANDA. “And what happened was inflation started to become very ugly, and bitcoin lost half of its value.”

The prices of other cryptocurr­encies have also been crushed. The price of ether, the second-most valuable cryptocurr­ency, has dropped about 25% just since early April, to under $2,300. Others, like solana and cardano, have also experience­d precipitou­s drops this year.

Bitcoin has rebounded from major losses before, and its long-term growth remains impressive. Before the pandemic boom in crypto prices, its value hovered well below $10,000. True believers, who call themselves bitcoin maximalist­s, remain adamant that the cryptocurr­ency will eventually break from its correlatio­n with risk assets.

Michael Saylor, the CEO of the business-intelligen­ce company MicroStrat­egy, has spent billions of his firm's money on bitcoin, building up a stockpile of more than 125,000 coins. As the price of bitcoin has cratered, the company's stock has dropped roughly 75% since November.

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