Bitcoin Stays Course, Remains Uncorrelated To Other Asset Classes

 | Jan 02, 2019 03:13PM ET

h3 As 2019 is starting out, both financial and cryptocurrency markets are hopeful for a turnaround in their respective fortunes.

The Dow Jones Index, the S&P 500, and the majority of public company stocks have had to endure a torrid end of the year. Even highly successful tech companies like FAANG (Facebook, AAPL, AMZN, NFLX, and Google) have become the victims of financial markets, losing more than $1 trillion in total from their all-time high value less than half a year ago.

From the perspective of cryptocurrencies, similar price developments have been observed, albeit from the beginning of 2018. Bitcoin and other digital assets have lost on average 90 percent of their market values in just one year, shortly after claiming all-time high price levels.

h3 Correlation For Investors/h3

In the grand scheme of financial markets, price movements are directly or indirectly influenced by investors’ perception. In traditional markets, if all of the biggest investment firms that make up most of the trading on markets follow similar models and assumptions, then one would expect similar output decisions in trading. Hence, there are critical moments when certain stocks either break out or down at the slightest confirmation of a positive or negative signal.

This can also partly explain how correlated some stocks or markets are. Generally, stocks representing companies from the same industry will be positively correlated. This means that price will tend to move in the same direction in the same market conditions. Conversely, there are asset classes or certain industries that have a negative correlation with each other — such as a company that sells ice-cream and one that sells umbrellas.

Institutional investors usually try to mimic and beat the overall market. This translates into managers picking asset classes that will outperform during positive trends and those that will allow them to avoid the bleed during a downward trend. As such, portfolios are comprised of different stocks and investment products with different correlations between them. Finding asset classes with negative correlation or almost no correlation with a portfolio is sometimes a tough task.

h3 Bitcoin’s Stance/h3

As Bitcoin wants to enter the international financial markets and fight for its own supremacy, many have lamented that Bitcoin’s price might be correlated with that of other asset classes. If this is true, institutional investors might not have an incentive to diversify their portfolios into digital assets.