New analysis from Grayscale finds Bitcoin’s price action is increasingly mirroring high-risk growth stocks like software equities rather than acting as a digital gold safe haven. The report notes Bitcoin has experienced a strong correlation with software stocks since early 2024 and has seen a roughly 50% drawdown from its peak above $126,000, aligning with sell-offs in that sector. Researchers suggest this shift reflects Bitcoin’s deeper integration into traditional finance but remains part of its long-term evolution.
Bitcoin’s long-standing narrative as “digital gold” is being tested as its recent price action resembles a high-risk growth asset more than a traditional safe haven. According to new research, Bitcoin’s short-term movements have not been tightly correlated with gold or other precious metals during their record rallies.
Instead, the analysis found Bitcoin has developed a strong correlation with software stocks, particularly since early 2024. That sector has recently faced intense selling pressure amid concerns that artificial intelligence could disrupt many software services.
The report suggests Bitcoin’s growing sensitivity to equities reflects its deeper integration into traditional financial markets. This shift is driven by institutional participation, exchange-traded fund activity and changing macroeconomic risk sentiment.
Bitcoin has experienced about a 50% drawdown from its October peak above $126,000. The decline unfolded in several waves, beginning with a historic liquidation event in October 2025, followed by renewed selling in late November and again in late January 2026.
Report author Zach Pandl said it would have been unrealistic to expect Bitcoin to displace gold as a monetary asset in such a short period. “Gold has been used as money for thousands of years and served as the backbone of the international monetary system until the early 1970s,” Pandl wrote.
While Bitcoin’s failure to reach similar monetary status is central to the investment thesis, it could evolve in that direction over time. This evolution may occur as the global economy becomes increasingly digitized through AI, autonomous agents and tokenized financial markets.
In the near term, Bitcoin’s recovery may depend on fresh capital entering the market, either through renewed ETF inflows or a return of retail investors. Market maker Wintermute stated retail participation has recently been concentrated in AI-related stocks and growth narratives, limiting near-term demand for crypto assets.

