Bitcoin and gold draw closer as correlation with dollar and equities weakens

There has been a significant shift in how closely Bitcoin (BTC) moves alongside traditional equity indices compared to earlier months. The correlation with the Nasdaq and the S&P 500, which had been relatively strong through much of 2024, shows a slight but consistent decline going into late 2024 and 2025.

bitcoin correlation with spx
Bitcoin’s correlation with the S&P 500 Index from February 2024 to February 2025 (Source: CryptoQuant)

Part of the reason for this weakening correlation is the macroeconomic environment. Changes in monetary policy, market sentiment, or both affect risk assets differently, which directly results in Bitcoin no longer moving in tandem with equities as it did during more synchronized risk-on phases earlier in 2024.

btc correlation with nasdaq
Bitcoin’s correlation with Nasdaq from February 2024 to February 2025 (Source: CryptoQuant)

The political and economic climate in the US drives most of these movements. When the Federal Reserve hints at rate changes or shows concerns about economic growth, certain stocks can react faster, while Bitcoin may see inflows driven more by anticipation of a “digital gold” narrative, thus reducing the close equity-like correlation.

However, the relationship between Bitcoin and the US Dollar Index (DXY) has shown an increased correlation. Until August 2024, the two still moved largely in opposite directions, as is often the case when a strong dollar can pressure speculative assets.

By September 2024, the correlation became positive, showing that Bitcoin was no longer purely inversely tied to the dollar’s moves. While the correlation between BTC and DXY has been decreasing at a much slower pace than its correlation with Nasdaq and the S&P 500, it still represents a significant shift from the trend established in 2024.

When Bitcoin no longer moves in lockstep with equities, even subtle changes in the dollar’s behavior can look less influential than before. A continued weakening dollar might, in principle, sustain a more negative correlation with Bitcoin if Bitcoin was being treated simply as a currency alternative or a risk-on hedge against the dollar.

However, if Bitcoin is simultaneously seeing a decrease in correlation from the very equity markets that have historically shown strong inverse relationships with the dollar, that decoupling can indirectly drag down the Bitcoin–dollar correlation as well.

The net effect is that the correlation trend with DXY will still fall, but at a more measured rate, because the primary driver — Bitcoin’s correlation to traditional risk assets — has already been diminishing rapidly.

bitcoin correlation with dxy
Graph showing Bitcoin’s correlation with the DXY from February 2024 to February 2025 (Source: CryptoQuant)

Given these diminishing correlations, Bitcoin’s relationship with gold is no surprise. Bitcoin’s correlation with gold was highly volatile throughout 2024, turning negative in November after a two-month stint above 9.  In mid-January, the correlation began to climb, showing that investors are treating Bitcoin as a kind of digital counterpart to gold rather than as a purely speculative play.

This stronger alignment with gold often means that the market is looking more to safe-haven narratives — perhaps in response to macro uncertainties or volatility in equities — rather than lumping Bitcoin in with high-risk tech investments.

bitcoin correlation with gold
Graph showing Bitcoin’s correlation to gold from February 2024 to February 2025 (Source: CryptoQuant)

A continued uptrend in this correlation can signal that participants are leaning on Bitcoin, alongside gold, as a hedge against currency devaluation or broader market volatility. When that kind of sentiment takes root, the price patterns of Bitcoin can begin mirroring movements in gold more than in stock indices or the dollar, making its price less dependent on the fluctuations of classic equities and somewhat independent from short-term dollar swings.

The post Bitcoin and gold draw closer as correlation with dollar and equities weakens appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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