Bitcoin: A diversified asset, not a safe haven.

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The unstable relationship of Bitcoin with the US stock market raises questions about its role as a global safe-haven asset during times of financial stress.

Research from RedStone Oracles shows that Bitcoin has a strong negative correlation with the U.S. stock market when considering the correlation over a short seven-day period. However, the 30-day index indicates a "volatile" relationship between Bitcoin prices and the S&P 500 index, with a coefficient ranging from -0.2 to 0.4.

The report indicates that Bitcoin does not function as a reliable risk hedge for stocks due to a lack of strong negative correlation below -0.3, which is necessary to help mitigate market stress.

Although Bitcoin has not yet reached the momentum of gold or government bonds, it still holds value as a portfolio diversification tool. The ability of Bitcoin to move independently of other assets can provide additional returns when other assets are weakening.

Bitcoin needs to "mature" before separating from the stock market. Institutional acceptance will help this, with investment in corporate treasury reducing Bitcoin's 30-day volatility.

Meanwhile, as Bitcoin evolves into a more stable global asset, the decrease in weekly volatility marks its maturation. This cryptocurrency is being viewed by investors as a long-term investment vehicle due to its price volatility dropping below the actual volatility indices of the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.

Although it is not yet the most reliable asset during times of stress, Bitcoin will increasingly be recognized as a portfolio diversification tool. The average annual growth over the past five years, outperforming stocks and traditional safe-haven assets, demonstrates the benefits of allocating a small amount of Bitcoin in a portfolio.

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