Bitcoin's Correlation with S&P 500 Fractures at Crucial Time
The cryptocurrency faces a major drawdown while equities hit record highs, raising questions about its ETF-era demand.
Bitcoin’s relationship with the S&P 500 has stopped behaving like a simple correlation trade at exactly the wrong time for bulls.
For much of 2026, the logic was clean enough. When oil jumped during the Iran war, yields rose amid inflation fears, stocks sold off, and Bitcoin followed, as the market treated BTC as a liquidity-sensitive risk asset.
When the pressure eased, both risk trades could recover together.
That link has now fractured. The S&P 500 closed at a fresh record 7,609 on June 2, with the latest leg tied to earnings strength and AI-linked stocks.
At the same time, Bitcoin is trading near $63,508 on June 4, down 13% over seven days, down 21% over 30 days, and 49% below its Oct. 6, 2025 all-time high.
Bitcoin is doing more than quietly lagging a mild equity rally. It is in a major drawdown while the world’s most watched equity benchmark pushes higher.
Bitcoin is reacting to more than the same macro signal as stocks. It is being forced to prove whether the ETF-era bid that carried it from the 2023 anticipation trade through the January 2024 launches and into the 2025 high is still the marginal buyer.
The S&P 500 correlation made sense
The earlier correlation had a straightforward explanation. The same transmission channel hit two assets that had become sensitive to liquidity.
The Iran/Hormuz shock gave markets a physical reason to price inflation risk. EIA data showed total oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz falling from 20.7 million barrels per day in the fourth quarter of 2025 to 14.6 million barrels per day in the first quarter of 2026.
A World Bank scenario analysis framed the disruption as the largest oil-market shock in history and put 2026 Brent scenarios around $95 to $115 per barrel depending on how the disruption evolved.
That channel flowed straight into rates. The 10-year Treasury yield rose to about 4.45% from 3.96% before the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran, as investors priced in higher inflation and fewer Federal Reserve rate cuts.
In that setup, Bitcoin could trade like a stock without being one. Higher oil threatened inflation. Higher inflation kept yields elevated. Higher yields drained risk appetite. Stocks fell, and BTC fell with them.
The earlier Iran-deal rally setup needed proof in oil flows, gasoline prices, inflation compensation, and Fed pricing before traders could treat it as more than a relief trade.
A separate May analysis noted that Bitcoin’s apparent break from U.S. stocks could have reflected different lead markets at different times of day rather than a durable decoupling.
The out-of-hours detail fits that framework. Weekend crypto trading can outpace U.S. equity desks, especially when oil headlines or rate expectations hit before cash equities reopen.
Once the S&P 500 starts trading, the larger liquidity signal can pull Bitcoin back into the same risk-asset channel. That made the prior break fragile.
This week’s pattern carries more weight. The current move has lasted beyond a weekend rally fading into the U.S. open. It is a multi-day equity high against a crypto selloff.
The current break is about the buyer
The most important Bitcoin levels are now below the market rather than above it.
Bitcoin’s flash crash below $68,000 triggered around $400 million in liquidations in under an hour and exposed how crowded bullish positioning had become.
The move also pushed BTC below several on-chain levels traders were watching, including the short-term-holder cost basis near $76,900 and the true market mean around $78,000.
That changed the tone. A market that was still trying to frame weakness as a dip suddenly had to price protection.
Current options positioning shows traders paying to protect against a fall toward $50,000 after BTC broke below $70,000, with $60,000 and $50,000 becoming live downside markers rather than distant bear-market talking points.
The immediate battle line is the old $66,900-$68,000 range. That area capped the 2021 cycle, defined part of the 2024 breakout, and is now testing whether the ETF-era rally can defend former resistance as support.
A fast reclaim would argue that the selloff was a liquidation event. Rejection would keep the downside path in control.
The ETF channel is central because it changed Bitcoin’s market structure. The SEC approved spot Bitcoin exchange-traded products on Jan. 10, 2024, opening regulated access to BTC through traditional brokerage accounts.
That channel helped turn Bitcoin from a mostly crypto-native cycle asset into a tradable part of broader institutional portfolios.
The same wrapper that brought in new demand also made flows easier to measure. If spot Bitcoin ETFs are bleeding while AI equities are rallying, a grand anti-Bitcoin thesis is unnecessary.
The marginal buyer only has to be somewhere else, and ETF-flow tables make that test visible day by day.
That is where the AI and mega-IPO angle becomes interesting. SpaceX has filed an S-1 with the SEC, and S&P Dow Jones Indices has consulted on changes to MegaCap eligibility, including reducing IPO seasoning from 12 months to 6 months and creating exceptions for MegaCap companies.
Nasdaq has also run a 2026 Nasdaq-100 consultation around very large new listings.
SpaceX’s index path remains contingent on index provider decisions and timing. The current documents show methodology pressure rather than automatic S&P 500 inclusion.
If investors are preparing for large AI or space-linked listings while the S&P is already being carried by AI earnings, Bitcoin has to compete for attention, liquidity, and risk budget in a market where the excitement is elsewhere.
DeFi gives Bitcoin little help
The broader crypto backdrop offers little help to Bitcoin.
Institutional blockchain adoption is real, but it is increasingly happening through controlled rails. CryptoSlate’s analysis of Wall Street’s on-chain push argued that tokenization can advance without reviving open DeFi in the way retail users remember.
The distinction affects price because tokenized Treasuries, controlled settlement systems, and permissioned market infrastructure create a different feedback loop from the speculative DeFi cycle that once pulled retail liquidity into crypto.
DeFiLlama data puts aggregate DeFi TVL near $73 million, down from $80 billion in late May, and the all-time high of $173 billion in October 2025, well below the kind of broad risk-appetite signal crypto bulls would want to see.
Thus, open DeFi currently offers little offset to Bitcoin’s ETF-flow problem.
Security pressure adds another drag. CertiK has warned that AI has expanded the digital-asset attack surface, as Chainalysis highlights increased pressure from crypto crime across the industry.
For Bitcoin, if institutional crypto interest shifts toward ETFs, tokenized assets, and permissioned rails while retail DeFi remains weak, Bitcoin’s price becomes even more dependent on whether regulated spot demand returns.
That leaves Bitcoin without a second speculative engine at the moment its first one is being tested. In prior cycles, weakness in BTC could still sit beside rising retail leverage, yield-farming appetite, and broad altcoin beta.
The current setup is thinner. Tokenization may be growing, but the capital showing up there is less likely to rotate quickly into open crypto risk.
That difference also changes what a rebound would look like. A retail DeFi recovery would show up as rising TVL, broader stablecoin circulation inside open protocols, stronger fee generation, and renewed leverage across lending and perpetual venues.
A tokenization-led recovery can grow balance sheets while leaving public-market crypto beta weak. For BTC, that split keeps the watchlist focused on ETF flows, options, and the $66,900-$70,000 shelf.
The two paths from here
Bitcoin is close enough to major long-term valuation models that assuming a straight collapse is too simple. It is also damaged enough that assuming an immediate recovery is premature.
The power-law framework is useful here because it shows why the current area carries weight.
For those new to the power law, Bitcoin.com’s power-law chart explains the model as a log-log price corridor with fair-value and band assumptions, while recent market discussion has framed BTC as trading near a historically low power-law zone.
The model provides context rather than destiny. Stock-to-flow looked powerful until it failed badly after the 2021 cycle. Power-law context makes the $54,000 to $58,000 area more important than a random chart level.
The market now has two credible paths:
PathProbabilityWhat validates itWhat breaks itLiquidity reset and base60%BTC fails to reclaim $66,900-$70,000, ETF outflows persist, options demand around $60,000 and $50,000 grows, and AI equities keep attracting the marginal risk dollar.Spot ETF flows turn positive quickly and BTC reclaims the old shelf with volume.Fast recovery and recoupling40%BTC retakes $68,000-$70,000, oil and yields cool, ETF flows stabilize, and the move back above short-term-holder cost basis turns the selloff into a liquidation reset.BTC loses $60,000 and then the $54,000-$58,000 model/support cluster while ETF redemptions continue.
The first path is more likely because the evidence is already pointing there. Bitcoin has broken key levels, ETF demand is under pressure, hedging has moved lower, and equities are rising for reasons specific to AI earnings and index-flow demand.
The base-case reset can happen without a full bear-market collapse. It points first to a support test and base-building attempt.
The second path remains live because Bitcoin is already trading near an area where long-term models and prior market structure should count.
A rapid flow reversal could quickly repair sentiment. If BTC reclaims $70,000 and the short-term holder cost basis is near $76,900, the divergence would look more like forced de-risking than a cycle failure.
My older $49,000 absolute-bottom area therefore sits as a tail-risk extension rather than the primary forecast.
It becomes credible if Bitcoin loses the $54,000 to $58,000 cluster, if ETF outflows keep running after the liquidation event, and if the AI equity trade continues to absorb the capital that might otherwise have returned to BTC.
For now, Bitcoin is testing whether it can rally with stocks. It is also revealing how much of its ETF-era advance depended on a specific buyer showing up.
The next answer will come from flows and levels, not from the S&P 500’s record alone.





