‘Bitcoin is melting.’ Here’s what a 30% drop from highs in the crypto may say about stock-market risk sentiment – MarketWatch

What does a weekend meltdown in bitcoin prices portend for U.S. stocks?

Bitcoin BTCUSD, -3.51% is supposed to be an asset uncorrelated with equity markets, or any other traditional asset for the matter, but some analysts have said the cryptocurrency has traded in closer step with parts of the market amid the recent turbulence in equities as investors attempt to assess the most effective strategies for playing an economy recovering from the worst pandemic in more than a century.

In a blog post on Sunday, Mott CapitalsMichael Kramer said bitcoins recent breakdown could signal risk appetite on Wall Street is in transition presumably in a bearish direction.

Bitcoin is telling us the risk sentiment of the market overall is shifting, and we care about bitcoin because we care about risk sentiment, Kramer wrote.

Bitcoin prices are down 28% from a peak at $64,829.14 in mid-April, and Sundays trade was choppy for the worlds most prominent crypto after a tweet from digital-asset bull and Tesla Inc. TSLA, -1.01% CEO Elon Musk was interpreted as a threat to unload the $1.5 billion investment in bitcoin that the electric-vehicle company announced back in February. Musk attempted to clarify the exchange later, saying Tesla still retains its bitcoin cache.

Check out: Rather than Will cryptos drop to zero? investors should be asking this question instead, says strategist

Bullish sentiment has been a recent feature of markets even amid last weeks bout of volatility andcould be downshifting, said Kramer. The analyst says small-capitalization stocks, like those in the Russell 2000 index RUT, +0.34%, may be one aspect of the market moving the most closely in line with bitcoin.

The Russell 2000 closed Friday notching its largest weekly percentage decline since March 26, off 2.1%. It was a bruising week for stocks, generally, even if equities enjoyed a solid rally to end the five-day trading period that had been marked by unease about inflation in the middle of the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.36%, S&P 500 SPX, -0.08% and the technology-laden Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -0.48% all logged their steepest weekly losses since Feb. 26 and the Nasdaq also booked its lengthiest weekly losing streak, four straight, since Aug. 23, 2019.

Read: Jammed and distorted: investors are wrestling with inflation that may test the Feds framework

Kramer said bitcoin is melting, and added that it is possible that the asset may have further room to fall.

A few technical analysts see bitcoin potentially hitting $42,000. Katie Stockton, market technician and founder of Fairlead Strategies, said support sits below the weekends nadir just above $43,800.

So what does that all mean for stocks? Its hard to say.

Futures for the Dow YM00, +0.16%, S&P 500 index ES00, +0.14% and the Nasdaq-100 NQ00, +0.07% were all trading modestly lower Sunday night.

Some analysts see stocks headed higher to end 2021, bitcoin moves notwithstanding.

Tom Lee, founder of Fundstrat Global Advisors, is forecasting the S&P 500 to rise another 7% to 8% from current levels and he is maintaining his target for the broad-market benchmark at 4,400.

Lee said markets attempt to crash last week failed, and he saw parallels between last years slump and this current period, which he blamed, at least partly, on readjustments tied to taxes, the deadlines for which were extended to May 17.

In other words, the market could not muster enough panic to push further downside, wrote Lee.

Instead, we saw a strong rally in the second half of the week. We believe this rally will carry over into this week. In fact, we think that stocks are still on track to make new highs before June 30th, he forecast.

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'Bitcoin is melting.' Here's what a 30% drop from highs in the crypto may say about stock-market risk sentiment - MarketWatch

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