The S&P 500 hitting another all-time high just exposed Bitcoin’s real problem


Traders have been treating Bitcoin as a high-beta proxy for the same risk appetite driving Nvidia and the Mag-7, one that should move with equities on green days.

Instead, Bitcoin lost its $80,000 support and registered an intraday low of $78,759.70 on May 13, while the S&P 500 registered a new all-time high, QQQ rose 1.06%, and Nvidia added 2.84%.

This equity rally runs on earnings revisions, AI revenue, and buybacks, all of which bid up cash-flow assets and bypass liquidity ones.

A rally only the megacaps attended

The May 13 equity session was driven by strength in megacaps. Seven of eleven S&P 500 sectors closed lower, the Dow fell, and declining stocks outnumbered advancers on both the NYSE and Nasdaq, even as the index itself rose.

Signal May 13 read Why it matters
S&P 500 New ATH / green Headline risk-on signal
QQQ +1.06% Tech strength
Nvidia +2.84% AI/chip leadership
S&P sectors 7 of 11 down Weak breadth
NYSE/Nasdaq breadth Decliners > advancers Rally not broad
Bitcoin Lost $80k; low near $78,760 Liquidity assets left behind

The S&P 500 was green because the top 10 stocks, which now account for 36.5% of the index by market cap and are led by Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft, were up.

Goldman Sachs estimates AI investment alone will drive roughly 40% of S&P 500 EPS growth this year, and the largest cloud infrastructure companies plan to spend approximately $670 billion in 2026.

Megacap tech carries EPS beats, AI revenue lines, buyback programs, forward guidance, and margin expansion into every macro headwind, all of which reinforce bids when rates climb.

Bitcoin’s bid mechanism is liquidity alone, which means that when liquidity tightens, and the equity rally concentrates in cash-flowing megacaps, Bitcoin absorbs the downside. Meanwhile, the earnings upside flows exclusively to cash-generating megacaps.

April’s PPI report compounded the problem, as producer prices rose 1.4% month over month and 6% year over year, the largest 12-month gain since December 2022. Energy led, with gasoline prices up 15.6% on the month.

That print pushed Fed hike expectations sharply higher, with traders assigning a 34.3% chance of a rate increase by December, up from roughly 15% a week earlier.

Treasury yields and the dollar both climbed on the release. For a non-yielding asset with no earnings offset, that combination functions as a direct tax on valuation.

Correlation without upside beta

K33 found that BTC’s 30-day correlation with Nasdaq remained above 0.7, confirming Bitcoin still trades within the equity macro cycle.

Nasdaq futures gained 27% between Mar. 30 and May 8, the strongest 30-day move in 16 years, yet K33 identified a pattern of when Nasdaq rises more than 10% over 30 trading days, BTC’s upside beta often fades.

Bitcoin’s upside beta activates through broad liquidity expansion, and this rally concentrated gains in AI-linked earnings while BTC’s spot conditions deteriorated.

Bitcoin and Nasdaq correlationBitcoin and Nasdaq correlation
From Mar. 30 to May 13, Nvidia gained 45% and QQQ rose 28%, while Bitcoin added 4% before losing its $80,000 support.

Per Farside Investors data, spot Bitcoin ETFs drew $629.8 million on May 1, $532.3 million on May 4, and $467.3 million on May 5. Then the flows reversed to outflows of $268.5 million on May 7, $145.7 million on May 8, and $233.2 million on May 12.

BTC perpetual funding rates ran negative for 74 consecutive days going into this week, average daily BTC spot volume sat around $2.7 billion, and BTC closed below its 200-day moving average on every approach.

A market with negative funding, thin spot volume, and a 200-day moving average overhead requires a broad liquidity catalyst to break higher.

The Fed’s balance sheet stood at approximately $6.71 trillion in total assets as of May 6, with reserve balances at over $3 trillion and the Treasury General Account at $878 billion.

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