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đ§ Bitcoin or Big Tech
Can BTC break out?

Welcome back! While we continue to wait for word from London on the status of China-US trade negotiations, Casey spent the morning pondering if bitcoin might diverge from Big Tech in the coming months. Spoiler: No one knows, but she did pull some interesting data points.
Here goes:
Bitcoin the Big Tech stock?
Another day, another bitcoin rally.
After making a run approaching its all-time high last night, bitcoin was back in the red this afternoon, hovering around $108,600 and trading 1.4% lower over the past 24 hours as of 2 pm ET.
Bitcoinâs latest move is similar to what it did three weeks ago when the largest cryptocurrency notched a new all-time high just shy of $112,000. BTC went from around $103,000 to above $110,000 in roughly two days.
As Noelle Acheson pointed out in todayâs âCrypto is Macro Nowâ newsletter, bitcoinâs late-May rally coincided with a surge in short liquidations. In other words, investors were buying up BTC to cover their leveraged short positions.
Short BTC liquidations lately are similarly high, so Acheson estimates that last nightâs run up was likely driven by leverage covering vs. new spot investors. Iâd have to agree.
That being said, bitcoin often trades like a Big Tech stock: Itâs high volatility and, at least in recent months (dare I say years), has not been insulated from macroeconomic moves.
Bitcoinâs correlation to the Nasdaq Composite is currently 0.81, according to data from Yahoo Finance. The cryptoâs correlation with gold has recently moved negative, now sitting at -0.07, per Yahoo Finance.
The âbitcoin is digital goldâ narrative has certainly lost steam in recent years, with the cryptocurrency rising and falling along with risk appetites. Just look at what happened in April: BTC lost more than 11% the week after April 2 (Trumpâs so-called âLiberation Dayâ). The S&P 500 shed 12% and the Nasdaq Composite lost 13%.
Before the HODLers come for me, yes, bitcoin bounced back stronger than stocks. Since April 2, BTC has gained around 29%. The S&P 500 is up 7% and the Nasdaq Composite has gained just under 12%.
I still think bitcoin is going to trade on big macro news (interest rate decisions, inflation data, employment reports, etc.), but Iâll add that Big Tech companies are obviously more vulnerable to tariff policies, and weâve seen that in the price action.
Apple is down more than 17% year to date. Alphabet has lost more than 5% since the start of 2025.
Bitcoin is up more than 16%.
Looking ahead, the eight biggest US tech stocks (Mag 7 plus Broadcom) have seen an average downward earnings revision for Q2 of -5.9% (-2.2% if you exclude Tesla). Half of these names are currently underperforming the S&P year to date (Tesla, Apple, Alphabet and Amazon).
I donât think itâs too far-fetched to expect that BTC will continue to outperform, at least until the trade war settles down (assuming it does settle down, of course). Reminder that this is not investment advice, just your local newsletter writer taking a look into her crystal ball.
With the second quarter nearing an end and few updates on trade deals, weâll just have to wait and see.
â Casey Wagner