For years, Bitcoin was treated as a sound alternative investment. It didn't move with stocks. It didn't care about interest rates and was seen as an escape hatch from the traditional financial system.
That story is officially over.
Since February 3, 2026, Bitcoin has been moving almost in lockstep with tech stocks. When the Nasdaq drops, Bitcoin drops harder. When tech rallies, Bitcoin follows. The numbers confirm what many suspected: Bitcoin has become a high-powered version of a tech stock, not a hedge against one.
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What "Correlation" Actually Means
Correlation measures how two assets move together, and it can range from -1 to +1.
Bitcoin's correlation with the Nasdaq 100 swung from -0.68 to +0.72 since February. In simple terms, Bitcoin went from moving opposite to tech stocks to moving almost identically with them. That's a dramatic shift in a matter of weeks.
Why Did This Happen?
Three years ago, Bitcoin was mostly owned by retail investors, with individuals making independent decisions. That's no longer the case.
Major Wall Street firms (Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Vanguard) now manage significant Bitcoin exposure through ETFs. These institutional investors run sophisticated risk models that treat Bitcoin and tech stocks similarly. When markets turn volatile and their models signal "reduce risk," they sell both, often starting with Bitcoin because it's easiest to liquidate quickly.
The AI boom accelerated this connection further. Bitcoin mining companies that process Bitcoin transactions have pivoted to hosting AI computing chips, physically merging the two industries. When investors worry about AI spending being excessive, they sell AI stocks and Bitcoin simultaneously.
The Federal Reserve's Unexpected Role
Bitcoin is now extremely sensitive to interest rate expectations, something it was supposedly immune to.
When Kevin Warsh was nominated as the next Federal Reserve Chairman, a figure known for favoring tighter monetary policy, Bitcoin dropped sharply. Why, you may ask? Higher interest rates make future returns worth less today, which hits high-growth, speculative assets hardest. Bitcoin, now classified by institutional models alongside tech stocks, got hit accordingly.
Analysts estimate Bitcoin's price drops 12–15% for every 1% rise in real interest rates. That's not how an asset termed "digital gold" behaves. That's exactly how a high-growth technology stock behaves.
Key Takeaways for Investors
The rules for Bitcoin have changed. Here's what that practically means:
1. Bitcoin = Leveraged Tech Exposure
If you own tech stocks + Bitcoin…
You’re not diversified.
You’re amplifying the same risk factor.
What’s happening:
Strong correlation with growth/tech stocks.
Higher volatility than equities.
Larger drawdowns during selloffs.
Bitcoin during market stress:
Moves with equities.
Fails to hedge consistently.
Volatility increases.
2. Liquidity & Interest Rates Dominate
When rates rise:
Risk assets compress.
Liquidity tightens.
Bitcoin reprices lower.
The major banks cap Bitcoin exposure at ~4%, even in aggressive portfolios.
Why?
Volatility rises sharply beyond that.
Portfolio drawdowns increase.
Risk-adjusted returns deteriorate.
The Bottom Line
Bitcoin in 2026 is a high-powered tech bet, not a financial escape hatch. Its correlation with the Nasdaq tells you everything: when tech wins, Bitcoin wins bigger; when tech loses, Bitcoin loses harder.
That's not necessarily bad news for Bitcoin's long-term future. Institutional adoption, regulatory clarity, and even a US government Bitcoin reserve all suggest the asset is becoming permanent financial infrastructure.
But understanding what Bitcoin actually is right now matters before allocating to it. It's a high-beta expression of the same technology trade powering the Nasdaq.
Important disclosures: This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All investments involve risk, including possible loss of principal. Please consult with your financial advisor before making investment decisions.
