Crypto News: Crypto and Stocks Are Moving in Opposite Directions — S&P 500 Hits Nine-Week Win Streak While Bitcoin and Ethereum Keep Falling
The decoupling between cryptocurrency markets and US equities has intensified to its most visible level of 2026. The S&P 500 rose for a ninth consecutive week — its longest winning streak since 2023 — while Bitcoin fell 2.6% to $73,445 and Ethereum dropped 2.5% to $2,011 over the same period. The divergence exposes a fundamental shift in what is driving each market and raises a question that is becoming harder to ignore: has crypto lost its correlation to the broader risk-on trade that has powered equities to new highs?The macro backdrop: Iran optimism lifts stocks and oil, but not cryptoThe week's equity gains were fueled by optimistic expectations around an extended US-Iran ceasefire agreement. President Trump signaled that a final decision on the ceasefire memorandum is close — though he maintained firm conditions including Iran abandoning its nuclear program, surrendering its enriched uranium stockpile, and reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude stabilized around $92 per barrel as energy markets priced in partial de-escalation.US stocks thrived in that environment. The S&P 500's nine-week winning streak is the clearest expression of how equity markets are reading the geopolitical situation — as a gradual de-escalation that reduces inflation tail risks and supports corporate earnings. Tech stocks, AI plays, and traditional risk assets all participated in the move higher.Crypto did not. Despite the same geopolitical backdrop that lifted equities, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and most major tokens declined on the week — a stark illustration that the forces weighing on crypto are not purely macro in origin but are specific to the digital asset market itself.What is actually driving crypto lower: ETF outflowsMarket analysts identified the cooling of spot Bitcoin ETF inflows as the primary pressure on crypto prices. After accumulating nearly $3.4 billion in inflows through March and April, May has been a month of sustained distribution — with over $2 billion leaving the Bitcoin ETF complex in two weeks, BlackRock's IBIT posting its second-largest ever single-day outflow of $527.84 million, and the 30-day ETF flow momentum collapsing from a $13.21 billion peak in December 2024 to just $362.8 million.When the institutional channel that drove Bitcoin's recovery from $60,000 to $83,000 flips from accumulation to distribution, price follows. The nine-week equity rally has not generated a corresponding revival of institutional Bitcoin ETF demand — and without that demand, the supply pressure from ETF redemptions, whale distribution, and corporate Bitcoin sellers like Sequans Communications has gone largely unabsorbed.Token performance: HYPE dominates, TRX leads lossesThe week's performance breakdown reveals a market in selective rotation rather than uniform decline. HYPE — the native token of perpetual exchange HyperLiquid — surged 19.4% to around $65, becoming the week's standout performer by a significant margin. The move was amplified by a high-profile endorsement: Intercontinental Exchange CEO Jeffrey Sprecher described HyperLiquid as "a bigger opportunity than Nasdaq" at the Bernstein conference, a comment that drove significant institutional attention to the platform and its token.BNB showed relative strength with a 1.9% weekly gain — consistent with its established pattern of outperforming during broad market weakness. XRP edged 0.7% higher. Dogecoin was essentially flat.On the downside, TRX fell 5.6% — the weakest performance among the top ten cryptocurrencies by market capitalization. Solana declined 2.2%. Both Bitcoin and Ethereum posted comparable weekly losses of 2.5% to 2.6%.The fragility beneath the surfaceMarket participants are treating the current rebound in risk assets with caution. The significant differences between the US and Iran on key ceasefire conditions — nuclear program abandonment, uranium stockpile surrender, and Strait of Hormuz reopening — mean that the geopolitical optimism currently supporting equity markets could reverse rapidly if negotiations break down.Trump's statement that a final decision is "close" has been preceded by multiple failed attempts to finalize the deal since February. The June 5 negotiating session remains the next concrete milestone — and any negative development at or before that session could trigger the kind of rapid risk-off reversal that has repeatedly punished crypto markets more severely than equities throughout the current conflict.The nine-week S&P 500 win streak and Bitcoin's concurrent weekly decline are not necessarily permanent structural decoupling — but they do reflect a market environment where the specific headwinds facing crypto, primarily ETF outflow pressure and institutional de-risking, are currently stronger than the macro tailwinds that are lifting equities. Until ETF flows stabilize and the Iran situation resolves definitively, that divergence is likely to persist.