Bitcoin’s Volatility Falls Amid Rising Uncertainty In Stocks

 | Oct 23, 2022 01:58AM ET

Sovereign debt bubbles are being tested across the world.

At one year’s decline of -69%, Bitcoin’s 20-day realized volatility has reached under the S&P 500 and Nasdaq. After falling under $24k in mid-August, Bitcoin’s price stayed largely within +/-5% of the $19k range. It appears that Bitcoin’s new-found stability, the highest since 2020, is the result of headwinds hitting the global economy.

h3 Bitcoin Volatility Hits Nasdaq Parity/h3

Although Q3 corporate earnings from IBM (NYSE:IBM) and AT&T (NYSE:T) were positive, Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA)’s missed target for vehicle deliveries put a damper on Nasdaq, causing the tech-heavy index to fall by 0.5% yesterday. The resignation of the UK’s prime minister spiked the stock market volatility further, as she broke the record as the shortest-term PM in history.

More importantly, after the higher-than-expected CPI report of 8.2%, the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Patrick Harker, noted that the central bank will continue to hike interest rates.

“Given our frankly disappointing lack of progress on curtailing inflation, I expect we will be well above 4% by the end of the year.”

Anticipating the hawkish Fed’s interest rates above 4%, the 10-year Treasury yields jumped to 4.23% on Friday, the highest since the global financial crisis of 2008. Because rising bond yields make capital more expensive, this suppresses the company’s future valuations, causing further selloffs and market anxiety.

As a result of increased equities volatility, both S&P 500 and Nasdaq are down, at -4% and -4.3% respectively over the last 30 days. During the same period, Bitcoin is up by +0.94%. In turn, Bitcoin’s 20-day rolling volatility compared to both indices is the lowest in two years.