What’s Next for Bitcoin and Stocks? Analysts see a volatile second half

At the same time, he expects macroeconomic uncertainty to remain the dominant force across the financial markets. Correlations between stocks, bonds, commodities and cryptocurrencies have risen in recent months, according to Kestrel data, suggesting investors are responding more to political developments than to company-specific fundamentals.

“The rest of the year is going to be messy,” he said, arguing that uncertainty surrounding Federal Reserve policy and fiscal funding could keep markets volatile before financial conditions eventually improve.

Chris Sullivan, co-founder and portfolio manager at digital asset hedge fund Hyperion Decimus, sees a similar backdrop of heightened uncertainty, but believes investors are paying too much attention to market narratives and not enough to market mechanics.

He argued that structural changes following the launch of US spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs), combined with institutional hedging activity in derivatives markets, have changed how bitcoin trades and weakened many of its historical relationships with broader macro indicators.

Bitcoin’s recent downturn has also challenged the idea that bitcoin had outgrown its traditional four-year cycle. After the launch of US spot bitcoin ETFs, some market participants argued that institutional capital would smooth out bitcoin’s volatility and end its well-known boom-and-bust pattern. Sullivan disagrees, saying the current decline still fits within historical market cycles and that he’s waiting for a definitive bottoming pattern before declaring the bear market over.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top