update<\/a> on Tuesday, saying \u201cBitcoin\u2019s 90-day correlation to the S&P 500 is currently at its highest since October 2020.\u201d<\/p>\nThe increased correlation between stocks and bitcoin was also reported by Bloomberg on Thursday, saying the 100-day correlation coefficient between the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 index and bitcoin reached above 0.40. The reading is \u201camong the highest such readings going back to 2011,\u201d Bloomberg noted.<\/p>\n
And with bitcoin following stocks down, other cryptoassets followed bitcoin, although they are generally thought of as less sensitive to the macroeconomic environment.<\/p>\n
Over the past 24 hours, smaller tokens such as yearn.finance (YFI), fantom (FTM), and avalanche (AVAX) were all down by around 15%, data from CoinGecko showed at 13:50 UTC.<\/p>\n
According to Marcus Sotiriou, an analyst at digital asset broker GlobalBlock<\/strong>, the recent crypto market selloff should be seen in relation to the heavy selling that has taken place in the stock market.<\/p>\nStocks \u201cfell dramatically\u201d on Thursday, bringing bitcoin down with it, Sotiriou said, adding that the coming days will show \u201cjust how much demand there is below and around the USD 40,000 support,\u201d which he called \u201ca critical and decisive level.\u201d<\/p>\n
Further, Sotiriou pointed to the recent discussions of a potential ban on crypto mining in Russia as significant for the market. \u201c[\u2026] Russia\u2019s crypto trading volume last year was reportedly USD 5 billion, and a ban will heavily impact this,\u201d the analyst said, although he also noted that stopping crypto trading completely in Russia will be very difficult.<\/p>\n
\u201cWe have seen China attempt to ban crypto trading multiple times over the past few years, yet China remains one of the most active countries for crypto,\u201d the analyst said.
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