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Bitcoin Hits All-Time High Before Crashing. Ethereum and Dogecoin Are Along for the Ride Down.

Travis Hoium, The Motley Fool

4 min read

  • Bitcoin hit an all-time high today but that didn't last long.

  • The drop in Bitcoin and crypto more broadly was driven by a weak bond auction from the Treasury Department, which caused a market drop across the board.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin ›

Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) was on fire early in the day on Wednesday, only to crash as the market dropped. Investors were reminded that Bitcoin doesn't run the world, the bond market does, and that was apparent today.

The big news was a weak 20-year Treasury auction from the U.S. Treasury that resulted in a big spike in bond yields. And higher yields typically mean investors are fleeing from high-risk assets to safer assets. Crypto advocates may think Bitcoin is a "safe" asset, but history tells us that Bitcoin trades correlated with growth stocks and isn't a safe haven if there's a recession or the market drops.

Bitcoin's jump to $109,722 happened just before 1 p.m. ET, just before the 20-year auction took place. The value dropped to $106,307 within minutes and is now down to $107,191 as I'm writing. Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) took a similar path, falling 5% to $2,480 in a few minutes and Dogecoin (CRYPTO: DOGE) dropped 5.6% peak to trough and is now at $0.226 per token.

The Bitcoin logo against a digital background.

Image source: Getty Images.

As much as crypto advocates would like to think cryptocurrencies are a hedge against the market, the reality is crypto is very correlated with growth stocks.

You can see that in the movement of Bitcoin and the Vanguard Growth Index ETF over the past three years.

Bitcoin Price Chart

Bitcoin Price data by YCharts

And the same correlation holds when the market fell in late 2021 into 2022.

Bitcoin Price Chart

Bitcoin Price data by YCharts

As bond values fall (because yields are rising), it's likely investors pull back from growth stocks and risky assets like cryptocurrencies. We're seeing that in a small move today, but don't be surprised if it gets worse.

The concern for investors is that bond markets are sending a warning. When yields jump like this it's an indication investors are seeing rising risk in Treasuries. This could be because they're not seeing the dollar as the safe haven it once was or there's higher risk of rising rates in the future because of inflation.

Those higher rates would be because the Federal Reserve has to fight inflation caused by tariffs. And with companies already starting to make decisions about holiday purchases, it's likely that higher prices will start flowing to consumers relatively soon. When that shows up in the data, it's likely too late, and the market is reacting before conditions get bad.