Investor appetite for high-stakes assets surges as US stock market soars to unprecedented heights of 7,400.

The S&P 500’s push to a record near 7,400 confirms a late‑cycle, full‑risk‑on regime where Bitcoin and major crypto assets are again trading as high‑beta extensions of U.S. equities rather than as independent hedges.
Gate’s futures data and European tape show the S&P 500 pushing into the mid‑7,300s and briefly tagging the 7,400 area, with one Borsa Italiana print putting the index at 7,374.29, up 0.12% at Thursday’s U.S. cash open before extending gains. Strategists at JPMorgan and Jefferies have been calling for exactly this kind of move: late‑2025 notes from both houses flagged 7,500–7,600 as a plausible 2026 target, with upside toward 8,000 in a “blue sky” scenario if inflation keeps easing and the Fed manages a shallow cutting cycle.
Equities at all‑time highs, macro backdrop still supportive
That is essentially where we are now: war in Iran has not derailed earnings or multiple expansion, and AI‑heavy megacaps have dragged the entire benchmark higher. MarketWatch, summarizing JPMorgan’s latest revision, said the bank now sees 7,600 as a base‑case year‑end level with room to 8,000 if rate cuts arrive and the AI boom persists. A separate Yahoo Finance explainer asked whether the S&P at 7,000–7,400 already looks “bloated,” warning that stretched valuations and narrow leadership make the rally vulnerable to any macro disappointment.
Crypto is trading like levered equities again
In that context, crypto is not on its own island. A series of pieces from Bloomberg, Phemex and others all converge on the same point: bitcoin has re‑coupled with U.S. stocks. Bloomberg reported in early March that the 30‑day correlation coefficient between $BTC and the S&P 500 had climbed to 0.74, “the highest level this year,” as both sold off together on Iran war headlines before recovering. Phemex’s correlation note put the 30‑day rolling $BTC–S&P figure at 0.74 in early March, with intraday r‑squared readings hitting 0.94, and concluded that bitcoin was behaving as “a leveraged bet on the same risk‑on/risk‑off cycle” rather than an independent hedge.
Analytics firm Intellectia, citing Reuters data, went further, claiming that at one point in April the correlation spiked to 0.96 — an almost one‑for‑one relationship — and arguing that this “fundamentally challenges the narrative that cryptocurrency serves as an effective portfolio diversifier.” MEXC’s market commentary made a similar point after a March CPI print sent yields up and the S&P down: bitcoin’s correlation “flipped positive” to about 0.13 on a 20‑week lookback, and $BTC became “the worst‑performing major asset in 2026” precisely because it amplified equity drawdowns instead of offsetting them.
The flip side is that equities at record highs tend to drag crypto up with them when the macro wind is at investors’ backs. A recent AMBCrypto piece described how an S&P rally of 1.2% on easing oil prices and de‑escalating Iran fears coincided with a 1.96% jump in the total crypto market cap over the same window, as capital rotated back into risk across the board. Yahoo Finance likewise noted that crypto equities and tokens ripped higher on the first serious U.S.–Iran ceasefire headlines, with bitcoin up about 5% to $72,000, ethereum up 7% to $2,250, and listed names like Coinbase and Strategy gaining 6–8% in a single session.
What a 7,400 S&P means for $BTC and alts
Put bluntly, a record‑high S&P 500 at 7,400 is a macro green light for risk — and that includes crypto. If investors are comfortable paying peak multiples for AI‑heavy tech at the end of a hiking cycle, the marginal appetite for high‑beta assets like bitcoin and ethereum generally improves, especially when ETF flows and on‑chain narratives are aligned.
But the same factors that make this supportive also embed fragility. With U.S. stocks smashing new highs just as valuations stretch and earnings expectations are upgraded, any negative macro surprise — a hotter‑than‑expected inflation print, a hawkish Fed turn, or a geopolitical shock that actually dents earnings — would likely hit both equities and crypto together. The correlation data suggest that when the S&P drops 2–3%, bitcoin still tends to move 3–5 times as much on a volatility‑adjusted basis.
So the index at 7,400 is a signal that we are late in a classic risk‑on phase: liquidity is back, fear is low, and both stocks and crypto are being bid as part of the same trade. For $BTC and the broader market, that has historically been exactly when you get the sharpest upside — and, once the music stops, the fastest drawdowns.