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Is Crypto Still an Independent Asset? New Research Sheds Light

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A new academic study published on SSRN explores whether cryptocurrencies are still independent alternative assets or have they become increasingly integrated with traditional financial markets. The research looks at how big cryptos, gold, oil, stocks, and the dollar interact, especially in terms of how market shocks and volatility move from one asset group to another.

Since 2024, more institutions have entered crypto than ever via ETFs, corporate treasury strategies, tokenization projects, and traditional banks. As a result, many now think cryptocurrencies are no longer operating in isolation. SSRN researchers say that different asset classes become more linked during market turmoil, so big economic events can now move crypto just like they move stocks, oil, gold, and currencies.

Crypto Is No Longer Living in Its Own World

One of the main takeaways from the study is that cryptocurrencies appear to be behaving less like isolated speculative assets and more like part of the wider global financial system.

During the last few months of the Middle Eastern conflict and oil prices surging, Bitcoin (and many others) fell sharply despite no major crypto‑specific negative catalyst. Most blamed the drop on a general risk‑off mood in global markets, rather than anything happening within the Bitcoin ecosystem itself.

On top of that, with the announcement of a peace deal between the US and Iran, the whole crypto market experienced gains. All of the top cryptocurrencies saw a price increase. For instance, Ethereum, Solana, Cardano, and XRP had a roughly 10% increase in the last 24 hours, while some like Zcash saw an even bigger boost, over 25%.

Related: Bitcoin Reclaims $65,000 as US-Iran Peace Deal Sends Oil Crashing

Crypto Is Mostly Independent

Outside of geopolitical influence, according to the SSRN paper, crypto is mostly independent of stocks, gold, oil, and the dollar when you look at typical price moves. Moreover, crypto’s own shocks explain almost all of its variations. However, Granger causality tests show some one‑way links, where Bitcoin can predict returns in all four traditional assets, while stocks and the dollar tend to drive crypto’s volatility.

The paper also points out that traditional economic drivers are still of notable importance. Gold stays a top safe‑haven choice during periods of uncertainty, and oil prices keep shaping inflation expectations and economic growth forecasts.

Another major factor is the dollar. When it gets stronger, liquidity tightens globally, and risk assets lose appeal. And when the US dollar index (DXY) spikes, crypto often gets extra pressure.

The study suggests that as more institutions pile in, these traditional finance links are becoming more important for digital assets.

Related: India Issues 44,000 Crypto Tax Notices, Uncovers $104M in Hidden Income