Bitcoin struggles as S&P 500 and Nasdaq rally – What’s holding BTC back?
BTC decoupled from equities as correlation broke down, forcing traders to rethink macro alignment.
Global markets struggled through 2025 after shifts in the United States’ trade policies weighed on risk assets.
Both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq posted drawdowns earlier this year. However, Bitcoin [BTC] suffered sharper pressure, particularly during the fourth quarter.
Even so, Bitcoin increasingly diverged from equities.
Correlation hit yearly lows
Historically, Bitcoin and U.S. equities showed a strong correlation during major market cycles. That relationship weakened materially in recent months.
According to analyst Darkfost, BTC’s correlation with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq fell to yearly lows. The divergence emerged after markets cooled following tariff and trade-war concerns.
While U.S. equities maintained upward momentum, Bitcoin struggled to regain its prior uptrend.

The S&P 500 rose about 2.06% quarter-to-date and roughly 16% year-to-date, climbing from near 5,400 to around 6,900. At the same time, the Nasdaq Composite gained about 4.76% in the fourth quarter and roughly 20.12% in 2025.
By contrast, Bitcoin remained under pressure after a drawdown of roughly 36%. Its recovery attempt stalled, widening the performance gap.

Bitcoin’s correlation with SPX dropped to around -0.299, while correlation with the Nasdaq fell near -0.24.
Correlations with Gold and the U.S. Dollar Index also weakened, while U.S. Treasuries showed relative strength.
Long-term metrics told another story
Short-term underperformance contrasted with Bitcoin’s longer-term return profile.
Using the Compound Annual Growth Rate, Bitcoin continued to outperform traditional assets over longer horizons. CAGR filtered out short-term volatility and focused on sustained growth.

Bitcoin’s five-year CAGR stood above 200%, translating to roughly 47% annually. Over the same period, the S&P 500 averaged near 17%, while the Nasdaq sat close to 20%.
That data suggested Bitcoin’s long-term correlation with equities remained asymmetric, driven more by return potential than short-term co-movement.
What the divergence meant
The correlation breakdown carried mixed implications for Bitcoin.
On one hand, weakening alignment reinforced BTC’s status as a distinct asset class. Equity market drawdowns may not automatically spill into crypto.
On the other hand, decoupling limited Bitcoin’s ability to benefit from equity rallies. Capital rotated into artificial-intelligence and data-center stocks, leaving crypto sidelined.
That divergence left Bitcoin trading independently, with macro sentiment exerting uneven influence.
Final Thoughts
- Bitcoin’s decoupling from equities reframed its role within broader markets rather than weakening its long-term case.
- That independence may increase short-term volatility, but it could also redefine how BTC responds to future macro shifts.