Bitcoin and Ethereum rally while S&P 500 plummets: Is crypto finally decoupling from traditional markets?

Bitcoin and Ethereum rally while S&P 500 plummets: Is crypto finally decoupling from traditional markets?

The cryptocurrency market advanced 2.15 per cent to reach a total capitalisation of US$2.44T on March 13, 2026. This gain stands out because it occurred while traditional risk assets faced severe pressure. Equities and bonds sold off sharply as Brent crude oil surged above US$100 per barrel for the first time since 2022. Escalating Middle East tensions and a critical blockage in the Strait of Hormuz triggered the move.

The crypto market’s weak correlation with the S&P 500 at -14 per cent and with Gold at -34 per cent signals a crypto-specific catalyst rather than broad risk-on sentiment. This divergence suggests digital assets are beginning to trade on their own fundamental narratives. Such independence represents a maturation I have long argued is essential for the asset class to evolve beyond a speculative adjunct to traditional finance.

The primary engine behind this rally is BlackRock’s launch of its iShares Staked Ethereum Trust, ticker ETHB, which debuted on Nasdaq on March 12. The product generated US$15.5M in first-day volume, a solid start for a novel instrument. This ETF allows investors to gain exposure to Ethereum’s price while simultaneously earning staking rewards. The design treats ETH as a productive, yield-bearing asset. This marks a profound shift.

For years, institutional adoption focused on Bitcoin as digital gold, a store of value. BlackRock’s move validates Ethereum’s utility as a foundational technology capable of generating cash-flow-like returns. By locking up ETH supply through staking, the product mechanically reduces sell-side pressure. This creates a favourable supply-demand dynamic. The critical metric to watch now is weekly ETF flow data. Sustained inflows would confirm that institutions are not just testing the water but are committing capital to this new yield-bearing crypto thesis.

Supporting this institutional momentum is a wave of regulatory optimism. Social media channels buzzed with reports that President Trump had confirmed a zero per cent tax on crypto transactions. Additional chatter highlighted the US Senate advancing measures to block a Central Bank Digital Currency until 2030. While these developments require official verification, the market is clearly pricing in a more accommodating policy environment. This narrative has fuelled a healthy rotation of capital into altcoins. The Layer 1 sector advanced 1.58 per cent.

Artificial intelligence tokens like Render surged over 11 per cent. Bitcoin dominance held steady at 58.78 per cent. This indicates that new money is flowing into the broader ecosystem rather than just fleeing to the largest asset. Such breadth is a positive sign for market health. It suggests investors are gaining conviction in specific technological narratives like decentralised compute and scalable infrastructure.

From a technical perspective, the market cap is now testing a pivotal level at US$2.44T. Immediate resistance sits at the recent swing high of US$2.46T. A clean break above this level could open a path toward the US$2.52T extension. Caution is warranted because the seven-day Relative Strength Index reads 74.39. This indicates overbought conditions in the short term.

The rally may need to consolidate before its next leg higher. The key support level to monitor is US$2.33T. A break below this floor would signal a loss of momentum and could trigger a deeper pullback. The next major catalyst will be the upcoming US ETF flow reports. Positive data could provide the fuel needed to overcome resistance. Disappointing flows might exacerbate a technical correction.

This crypto-specific rally gains additional significance when viewed against the backdrop of traditional market turmoil. On March 12, US indices posted broad declines. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 739.42 points, or 1.56 per cent, to close at 46,677.85. The S&P 500 dropped 103.22 points, or 1.52 per cent, to 6,672.58. This marked its lowest close since November. The Nasdaq Composite slipped 404.15 points, or 1.78 per cent, to 22,311.98 as technology stocks grappled with rising yields. The VIX volatility index settled at 24.23, reflecting elevated fear. The trigger for this selloff was the energy crisis. Brent crude surged over nine per cent to settle at US$100.20 per barrel.

The International Energy Agency warned of the largest oil supply disruption in history. This shock has forced traders to scrap expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026. Soaring energy costs threaten to reignite inflation. Consequently, US Treasury yields are climbing. The 2-year yield jumped 11 basis points. The 10-year yield hit 4.27 per cent. Stress is also emerging in the US$1.8T private credit market. Funds like Morgan Stanley and Cliffwater LLC have capped withdrawals following a surge in redemption requests.

In this environment, crypto’s decoupling is not just a market curiosity. It represents a potential shift in how digital assets function within a diversified portfolio. My view has consistently been that crypto’s long-term value proposition hinges on its ability to offer uncorrelated returns driven by its own adoption cycles and technological progress. The current action supports that thesis.

The rally is fuelled by a structural product innovation from the world’s largest asset manager and a favourable regulatory narrative. It is not driven by a surge in liquidity from traditional markets. This is a more sustainable foundation for growth. Sustainability remains the key question. Can the crypto market maintain its upward trajectory if ETF inflows decelerate this week or if the macro backdrop worsens? The overbought RSI suggests a pause is likely. The underlying drivers remain intact.

The path forward hinges on a few clear factors. First, institutional demand for the new staked Ethereum ETF must prove durable. Second, the regulatory narrative needs to translate into concrete policy actions to maintain confidence. Third, the market must successfully digest its overbought condition without breaking below the US$2.33T support. A failure on any of these fronts could lead to crypto re-correlating with traditional risk assets. Those assets are currently under severe strain from inflation fears and geopolitical instability. For now, the momentum is bullish, and the drivers are specific to the crypto ecosystem. This is a sign of maturation.

The market is beginning to trade on its own merits. This development aligns with the vision of a decentralised financial system operating in parallel with, and sometimes independently of, the legacy system. The coming days, with their focus on ETF flows and key technical levels, will provide crucial evidence on whether this independence can be sustained amid a global macro storm. Investors should watch the US$2.46T resistance and US$2.33T support as decisive boundaries.

A break above US$2.46T could accelerate gains toward US$2.52T. A drop below US$2.33T would signal a loss of momentum and invite a deeper correction. The US$15.5M debut volume for ETHB offers an initial benchmark, but sustained weekly flows will determine if institutional appetite remains strong.

With Bitcoin dominance at 58.78 per cent, the market retains room for altcoin expansion if the regulatory tailwinds persist. The 7-day RSI at 74.39 warns of short-term exhaustion, so patience may reward those waiting for a healthier entry point. In a world where Brent crude trades above US$100 per barrel and the 10-year yield touches 4.27 per cent, crypto’s ability to post gains on its own terms signals a new phase of market evolution. This phase demands careful monitoring of ETF data, technical levels, and policy developments. The US$2.44T market cap represents both opportunity and risk. Navigating this landscape requires discipline, clarity, and a focus on the structural forces shaping the next chapter of digital finance.

 

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

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Fortune: Crypto trading in India plummets as much as 70% as new hurdles scare off investors

Fortune: Crypto trading in India plummets as much as 70% as new hurdles scare off investors

The cryptocurrency boom in India, which has the world’s second-largest community of crypto investors, may be turning into a bust.

“In general, we have seen trading volumes [on Indian exchanges] come down by 30%-40% in the last two to three weeks,” Nischal Shetty, founder and CEO of WazirX, India’s biggest cryptocurrency trading exchange told Fortune.

Other Indian crypto exchanges say their trading volumes have been hit too.

Sumit Gupta, co-founder and CEO at CoinDCX, blames the 30-35% drop in trading volume on his exchange, one of India’s largest, on global and domestic factors. Bitcoin has been stagnant at $39,000 to $40,000 for several months, while large traders have slowed their activity due to new taxes, he says.

Atulya Bhatt, co-founder of BuyUcoin, an Indian cryptocurrency exchange, says trading volume on his platform has fallen up to 70% “since the new taxation came in this month.”

Drops in trading volume vary from exchange to exchange, but volumes on most crypto platforms have dipped 30%-40% in April from the prior month, says Raj Kapoor, founder of India Blockchain Alliance, a trade body for the crypto industry.

“It is just the beginning. Volumes will drop substantially if there is no [government] intervention,” says Kapoor. “It is not going to be healthy for a nation like ours. When you have an elephant in the room [like crypto], you have to learn how to dance with it or get trampled.”

The double whammy of new taxes and limited payment mechanisms has soured crypto investors’ sentiment in the South Asian country, home to 25 million investors who hold assets worth more than $6 billion—putting the future of crypto in India in doubt.

India’s new budget, which took effect when the new fiscal year started on April 1, imposed a 30% capital gains tax on cryptocurrency earnings, the same rate the government applies to winnings from horse racing and a significant increase from the previous scheme that didn’t specify taxes for crypto but applied income-based rates that maxed out at 30%. Under the new tax rules, cryptocurrencies are subject to a heavier tax than traditional asset classes like stocks, which are taxed at varying rates starting at 10%. The 30% tax rate on cryptocurrency gains applies even to earners whose total annual income is below INR 250,000 or $3,300 and are otherwise exempt from paying income tax.

“That is causing a lot of fear and stress in the younger population who are into crypto trading,” says Shetty.

In addition to the 30% tax on earnings, the finance ministry is levying a 1% tax on every crypto transaction starting in July in an effort to rein in speculative trading.

“Historical data indicates that transaction taxes significantly reduce trading volumes,” says. Kristin Boggiano, president of crypto exchange Cross Tower.

Italy, for example, introduced a 0.1% tax on equity transactions in 2012 that caused a 35% decline in trading volumes over a two-year period, Boggiano says.

A recent decision by Indian banks to stop funneling rupees to crypto exchanges via state-run Unified Payments Interface (UPI) is also hitting trading volume.

Typically, investors could transfer money from their banks to a crypto exchange wallet over UPI, India’s ubiquitous payments processor that’s responsible for 75% of all crypto transactions in India, according to Shetty’s estimates. Once the transfer hits a wallet, investors can use the money to trade cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin. But earlier this month, banks severed that financial plumbing, says Shetty.

The trouble started after Nasdaq-listed crypto exchange Coinbase, which launched rupee-based operations in India earlier this month, publicly said that its users could easily deposit funds to their accounts on the exchange using UPI, throwing the behind-the-scenes payments system into a glaring spotlight. In response to the ad, the state-run National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), which runs UPI, said it was not aware that the payment platform was being used to buy cryptocurrencies.

The statement by the Payments Corporation caused banks to second-guess the legality of routing payments to crypto exchanges. Banks have operated in a state of semi-limbo regarding crypto transactions for years after the country’s Supreme Court in 2020 overturned an order by the Reserve Bank of India for financial institutions to cut all ties with individuals and businesses dealing in cryptocurrency. The Supreme Court said the order violated the freedom of trade guaranteed by India’s Constitution, freeing up banks to facilitate crypto transactions until the latest NPCI statement delivered another dose of ambiguity.

Without access to UPI, crypto investors are finding it tough to deposit money from bank accounts to their wallets on crypto exchanges.

“We are on a wait and watch mode,” BuyUcoin’s Bhatt. “We are hoping that this is a temporary situation.”

India’s crypto enthusiasts had been hoping that the sector’s era of uncertainty was coming to a close.

Last year, Reserve Bank of India governor Shaktikanta Das said he had “serious concerns” about the potential risks of cryptocurrencies, and the government had proposed prohibiting certain private cryptocurrencies. However, the imposition of taxes on crypto earnings had signaled the government’s intent to regulate digital assets, rather than ban them outright.

But the new tax burden and UPI saga have cast the market back into the unknown, and industry executives say scores of startups in blockchain and crypto are exploring bases outside of India as a result.

“What we are seeing is a flight of funds to outside the country. A lot of people are opening payment wallets outside of India,” Kapoor says. High volume traders and firms are opting for locations like Dubai because it’s easier for crypto businesses to operate there, says Kapoor.

This week, India’s Business Today reported that WazirX founders Shetty and Siddharth Menon had shifted their base of operations from India to Dubai. In an interview with Fortune, Shetty declined to comment on the report. “WazirX is headquartered in Mumbai and Bengaluru, and there is no change in our operating procedure,” the company said in a statement.

BuyUcoin’s Bhatt admits the company has considered relocating from India but says that “[moving is] not a topmost priority as we would like to serve users in India.”

Anndy Lian, Singapore-based chairman of BigOne Exchange, a cryptocurrency exchange based in the Netherlands, expects investors to leave India’s crypto market for rivals in Singapore and Dubai.

“Constantly, we have been asked by Indian communities to start in India. We do not have intentions to set up a base in India currently,” Lian says. “If the regulations are clearer, we might consider.”

 

Original Source: https://fortune.com/2022/04/23/india-cryptocurrency-exchanges-trading-regulation-tax-upi-payments-wazirx-coindcx-buyucoin/

 

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

j j j