Wall Street Goes All-In on Stocks, So Why Not Bitcoin?

Source Beincrypto

Equity investors have bet so heavily on a Goldilocks economy that stock funds now command a record 64.7% of assets tracked by EPFR Global. Yet Bitcoin (BTC) sat out the rally entirely.

The split matters because Bitcoin typically behaves like a high-beta technology stock. This time, it broke from that pattern.

Stocks Run Out of Room While Crypto Falls Behind

Bloomberg reported that bullish investors have pushed risk-on sentiment so far that the next upside trigger is hard to spot. The optimism still rests on solid ground. 

Inflation is cooling, and growth and earnings remain strong. The Federal Reserve may also turn more dovish after CPI and PPI showed easing price pressure.

That conviction shows up in fund flows. Societe Generale strategists, including Arthur van Slooten, studied the shift. They found bond and money market funds drew heavier inflows than stock funds this year. Even so, neither pace matched the swelling pool of equity assets.

Within EPFR Global’s $72.9 trillion fund universe excluding commodities, equity funds now make up a record 64.7% of total assets. The analysts called it the most risk-on stance fund investors have ever held.

The JPMorgan Chase (JPM) Market Intelligence desk, led by Andrew Tyler, summed up the mood.

“For market bulls, this is even better than Goldilocks could have imagined,” he said.

However, that positioning has also left little fuel. Bank of America’s fund manager survey shows cash sitting at historically low levels. Deutsche Bank (DB) data shows systematic funds are heavily long equities, leaving little room to add. 

Trend-following CTAs have lifted equity positioning to the 72nd percentile of their historical range. Volatility-control funds are stretched further, at the 91st percentile.

In short, most buyers are already committed. That leaves equities stretched and short of fresh demand, even with earnings season off to a solid start.

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Why Bitcoin Ignored the Setup

With equity markets at a record high and cash running down, the question is why Bitcoin never joined the rally. The largest cryptocurrency lost 32.9% year-to-date and 13.4% in the second quarter, according to NYDIG research led by Greg Cipolaro. Over the same period, the Nasdaq 100 gained 27.7%, and technology equities rose 43.5%.

The gap was not a broad retreat from risk. Cipolaro notes that Bitcoin’s 3-month correlation with the S&P 500 remained high throughout the quarter, so the coin diverged in performance rather than decoupling outright.

Bitcoin’s Correlation With S&P 500, Gold, and The Dollar. Bitcoin’s Correlation With S&P 500, Gold, and The Dollar. Source: NYDIG

Instead, crypto-specific supply drove the losses. Strategy authorized roughly $1.25 billion in Bitcoin sales, flipping the largest treasury buyer into a seller. Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds shed $4.9 billion over the quarter.

Flows turned positive in mid-July, and Bitcoin trades near $63,871. NYDIG argues a lasting recovery needs sustained ETF inflows and renewed stablecoin supply growth.

The two markets now sit at opposite extremes. Equity investors hold record exposure with little cash to add, while Bitcoin trades well below its highs on thin, leverage-driven buying.

That leaves neither side with an obvious next move. Stocks look stretched at the top, and Bitcoin’s rebound lacks the spot demand to confirm a floor. For now, the Goldilocks trade that lifted equities has yet to reach crypto.

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Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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