The gap between equities and crypto has rarely been this pronounced. According to a Santiment update, from May 6 through June 1 the S&P 500 climbed 4%, while Bitcoin fell 13% and gold dropped 5%. That divergence has not been subtle. Traders have watched stock benchmarks grind higher almost daily, even as alternative assets struggled to find a bid. The rotation is now showing up in sentiment data. Investors are increasingly favoring US equities, a move Santiment traces directly to the corporate‑friendly policy environment under the current administration.
The divergence matters because it changes how capital flows behave. Bitcoin and gold have historically competed as stores of value during uncertain periods. Now, equities are absorbing a disproportionate share of that capital. The S&P 500’s steady uptrend has created a self‑reinforcing cycle: traders see stocks generating better returns with lower volatility and pull money from crypto. That trend becomes particularly visible when Bitcoin cannot sustain momentum despite structural tailwinds such as spot ETF adoption and deepening institutional involvement. In such an environment, even bullish long‑term narratives struggle to attract fresh buying.
Yet Santiment’s signal is not that the trend will persist. It is the opposite. The update points out that mainstream influencers are now loudly discussing stock dominance over crypto. That, the firm argues, is a reliable sign that the crowd has leaned too far into equity FOMO and crypto FUD. Markets, Santiment notes, almost always move contrary to the majority’s expectations. When everyone is certain equities are safer and crypto is broken, the positioning tends to be lopsided enough to invite a reversal. Whether that reversal comes through a correction in stocks or a sudden crypto bid is unknowable. But the sentiment guardrail is flashing.
Sentiment Extremes and Market Structure
Santiment’s framework treats crowd behavior as a contrarian indicator. When social volume around a particular asset class becomes one‑sided, it often marks a local top or bottom. Right now, the conversation has shifted decisively toward stocks. That does not guarantee a Bitcoin bounce. It does, however, raise the cost of chasing equities while abandoning crypto. The on‑chain analytics firm explicitly warns that this pattern “won’t last forever.” The open question is what catalyst forces the re‑alignment. It could be an equities correction driven by policy uncertainty, or it could be a crypto‑specific catalyst—such as a regulatory breakthrough or a major on‑chain development—that reignites interest.
Market participants watching the correlation breakdown will want to keep an eye on capital flows. If the divergence persists, it may compress crypto volatility further, making it harder for traders to generate returns. If it snaps back, the speed of the re‑correlation could catch equity‑heavy portfolios off guard. For now, the data suggests that the prevailing narrative has become too comfortable, and discomfort is often where opportunity lives. While Bitcoin’s price action may look discouraging, underlying blockchain activity remains robust. As developer activity on top blockchains shows, Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Polygon are still attracting significant builder attention, hinting that the ecosystem is not idle. Similarly, regulatory crosswinds—such as the still‑unresolved US crypto bill battle—add a layer of uncertainty that has clearly impacted sentiment in recent weeks.