- Bitcoin’s price has shown an unusually strong negative 52-week correlation with the dollar-yen exchange rate, with about 81% of its weekly moves corresponding to shifts in USD/JPY.
- This pattern means bitcoin and the yen, which has weakened against the dollar, have recently tended to move together, challenging the carry-trade view that a stronger yen should hurt crypto and other risk assets.
- The apparent link may be a byproduct of broader dollar strength driven by shifting Federal Reserve interest-rate expectations, rather than a direct relationship between the two assets.
Bitcoin's BTC$59,255.62 price has been tracking the yen's exchange rate against the dollar unusually closely, dropping as the Japanese currency weakens. The behavior runs counter to the "carry trade" theory that suggests a strengthening yen could trigger risk aversion in the crypto market.
The 52-week rolling correlation coefficient between bitcoin's price in dollars on Coinbase (COIN) and the dollar-yen (USD/JPY) pair from currency markets has dropped to -0.90, the most negative reading since late 2022, according to data source TradingView.
A coefficient that low indicates a strong negative correlation, meaning the bitcoin price tends to fall when the exchange rate rises (that is, when the yen weakens), and vice versa. This implies that 81% of weekly BTC price changes track the USD/JPY rate.
The figures undermine the carry-trade narrative, which argues that a weaker yen is linked to a stronger bitcoin and other risk assets. For at least a decade, traders have borrowed cheaply in yen and invested in higher-yielding, riskier assets.






