There’s a growing interconnectedness between virtual assets and financial markets.... Crypto assets such as Bitcoin have matured from an obscure asset class with few users to an integral part of the digital asset revolution, raising financial stability concerns.
The market value of these novel assets rose to nearly $3 trillion in
November from $620 billion in 2017, on soaring popularity among retail
and institutional investors alike, despite high volatility. This week,
the combined market capitalization had retreated to about $2 trillion,
still representing an almost four-fold increase since 2017.
Amid greater adoption, the correlation of crypto assets with
traditional holdings like stocks has increased significantly, which
limits their perceived risk diversification benefits and raises the risk
of contagion across financial markets, according to new IMF research.
Bitcoin, stocks move together
Before the pandemic, crypto assets such as Bitcoin and Ether showed
little correlation with major stock indices. They were thought to help
diversify risk and act as a hedge against swings in other asset classes.
But this changed after the extraordinary central bank crisis responses
of early 2020. Crypto prices and US stocks both surged amid easy global
financial conditions and greater investor risk appetite.
For instance, returns on Bitcoin did not move in a particular
direction with the S&P 500, the benchmark stock index for the United
States, in 2017–19. The correlation coefficient of their daily moves
was just 0.01, but that measure jumped to 0.36 for 2020–21 as the assets
moved more in lockstep, rising together or falling together.
The stronger association between crypto and equities is also apparent in emerging market economies, several of which have led the way in crypto-asset adoption.
For example, correlation between returns on the MSCI emerging markets
index and Bitcoin was 0.34 in 2020–21, a 17-fold increase from the
preceding years.
Stronger correlations suggest that Bitcoin has been acting as a risky
asset. Its correlation with stocks has turned higher than that between
stocks and other assets such as gold, investment grade bonds, and major
currencies, pointing to limited risk diversification benefits in
contrast to what was initially perceived.
Crypto’s ripple effects
Increased crypto-stocks correlation raises the possibility of
spillovers of investor sentiment between those asset classes. Indeed,
our analysis, which examines the spillovers of prices and volatility
between crypto and global equity markets, suggests that spillovers from
Bitcoin returns and volatility to stock markets, and vice versa, have
risen significantly in 2020–21 compared with 2017–19.
Bitcoin volatility explains about one-sixth of S&P 500 volatility
during the pandemic, and about one-tenth of the variation in S&P
500 returns. As such, a sharp decline in Bitcoin prices can increase
investor risk aversion and lead to a fall in investment in stock
markets. Spillovers in the reverse direction—that is, from the S&P
500 to Bitcoin—are on average of a similar magnitude, suggesting that
sentiment in one market is transmitted to the other in a nontrivial way.
Similar behavior is visible with stablecoins, a type of crypto asset
that aims to maintain its value relative to a specified asset or a pool
of assets. Spillovers from the dominant stablecoin, Tether, to global
equity markets also increased during the pandemic, though remain
considerably smaller than those of Bitcoin, explaining about 4 percent
to 7 percent of the variation in US equity returns and volatility.
Notably, our analysis shows that spillovers between crypto and equity
markets tend to increase in episodes of financial market
volatility—such as in the March 2020 market turmoil—or during sharp
swings in Bitcoin prices, as observed in early 2021.
Systemic concerns
The increased and sizeable co-movement and spillovers between crypto
and equity markets indicate a growing interconnectedness between the two
asset classes that permits the transmission of shocks that can
destabilize financial markets.
Our analysis suggests that crypto assets are no longer on the fringe
of the financial system. Given their relatively high volatility and
valuations, their increased co-movement could soon pose risks to
financial stability especially in countries with widespread crypto
adoption. It is thus time to adopt a comprehensive, coordinated global regulatory framework to guide national regulation and supervision and mitigate the financial stability risks stemming from the crypto ecosystem.
Such a framework should encompass regulations tailored to the main
uses of crypto assets and establish clear requirements on regulated
financial institutions concerning their exposure to and engagement with
these assets. Furthermore, to monitor and understand the rapid
developments in the crypto ecosystem and the risks they create, data gaps created by the anonymity of such assets and limited global standards must be swiftly filled.
IMF
© International Monetary Fund
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