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The financial markets in December showed two completely opposite scenes. U.S. stocks, driven by the "Christmas rally" at the end of the year, saw the Dow Jones and Nasdaq indices repeatedly hitting new highs, with optimism in traditional markets spreading across Wall Street. In stark contrast, the crypto market has fallen into stagnation—Bitcoin has been oscillating around $85,000, lacking any significant upward momentum. If this divergence continues to evolve, it could lead to more unexpected variables in the future.
Historically, a December rally in U.S. stocks usually drags crypto assets along for the ride. However, this time, an exception has occurred. There are two key issues behind this.
First, the misallocation of funds. The recent rise in U.S. stocks is mainly driven by expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts and strong earnings reports from tech companies, with incremental funds flowing into traditional markets. In contrast, in the crypto space, Bitcoin spot ETFs have experienced net outflows for five consecutive weeks, with institutional investors clearly reducing their holdings. This stands in opposition to retail investors who still hold a bottom-fishing mentality.
Second, internal pressure of chips within the crypto circle. Data shows that long-term holders sold 815,000 Bitcoins in the past month, the highest level since 2024. These large holders chose to heavily sell when Bitcoin broke the $100,000 threshold, while new funds have not been flowing in, and the market is entirely sustained by existing capital, resulting in a one-way decline without rebounds.
More worth pondering is the hypothesis of Bitcoin's "independent market." Some believe that the crypto market should forge its own independent path, but data provides an answer—the correlation between Bitcoin and the Nasdaq index remains high at 0.8 in 2025. The problem is that this correlation has become distorted: Bitcoin reacts sluggishly when U.S. stocks rise, but declines more sharply when U.S. stocks fall. From this perspective, Bitcoin is more like a tail asset with higher risk coefficients within the U.S. stock system.