Bitcoin (BTCUSD) briefly rose above $61,000 early Friday, riding on the heels of Thursday's stock market rally, but the cryptocurrency gave up some of those gains to trade on either side of the $60,000 mark depending on where stocks were trading.
This comes after the cryptocurrency crashed below $50,000 for the first time since February on Monday amid one of the worst days for stocks in recent history.
Much like Monday's price drop came in the midst of global market turmoil more generally, the price recovery and eventual reversal has mimicked what has taken place in traditional equities markets.
Notably, bitcoin's correlated movements with traditional equities markets have shown that the cryptocurrency can still act as a risk-on asset at times, despite the hope that it can operate as a safe haven in times of economic uncertainty.
According to Pearson correlation data from The Block, bitcoin moved more in tandem with the S&P 500 than gold this week, despite the «digital gold» nickname that has been frequently applied to the asset.
That said, many bitcoin holders were not phased by this week's price action. «In crises, markets sell what they can, not what they want,» Strike CEO Jack Mallers posted on X on Monday."#Bitcoin is down because it was the only market open to sell on Sunday night, not because the only fixed supply money we have is now less valuable."
The U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-trade fund (ETF) market also saw strong inflows of $194.6 million on Thursday, according to Farside Investors.However, flows are still negative on net this week, with $77.3 million leaving the funds.
Things have looked better for the spot ether ETFs this week, with $120.6 million of inflows, as outflows from the Grayscale Ethereum
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