• BNB was the best-performing asset (+128%) of the - on median - largest ten cryptoassets by market capitalisation over 2019. Bitcoin was the second best-performing asset (+87%) in this group.

  • Bitcoin’s market dominance seemingly stabilized around 68% after a strong climb from ~ 50% at the beginning of this year.

  • Generally, cryptoassets continue to be highly correlated with each other, exhibiting high median correlation coefficients.

  • Ether (ETH) is the highest correlated asset. With an average correlation coefficient of 0.69 throughout 2019, it is consistently among the most correlated assets. The coefficient started at 0.69 in Q1 and rose to 0.72 in Q4 (Q2: 0.65; Q3: 0.74).

  • The lowest correlated asset, Cosmos (ATOM), has a median annual correlation coefficient of 0.31, followed by Chainlink (LINK) and Tezos (XTZ) with coefficients of 0.32, respectively, 0.4.

  • Other than that, general clusters can be identified: programmable blockchains such as EOS, NEO, and Ethereum, for example, show higher median correlations with each other than alternative assets.

  • Lastly, assets might be stronger correlated with each other in adverse price movements. A further analysis over a more extended period could substantiate this finding.


This report discusses market performance in 2019 for large cryptoasset and assesses correlations between cryptoassets in Q4 2019, and the entire year of 2019.

1. Market performance of 2019

Having already started in Q3 of 2019, the adverse price movement across most large marketcap cryptoassets continued in Q4. While only three assets, Tezos (XTZ), NEO, and Bitcoin SV (BSV), started recovering their price, all price movements slowed down drastically, indicating a potential stabilisation of the market.

Assessing the entire year of 2019, four of the ten largest cryptoassets partially sustained their substantial price gains from Q1 and Q2 of 2019. Bitcoin price climbed by 87%, only outperformed by BNB, which climbed by almost 130% during 2019.

Litecoin (LTC) and Bitcoin Cash (BCH) also exhibited respective annual price gains of +30% and +25%. The other large cryptoassets depicted in Table 1 netted negatively for 2019.

An extended list for the price performance of the next ten largest cryptoassets can be found in the appendix1.

Notably, the adopted methodology for the quarterly price movements is the following: three-day median closing values reported by CoinMarketCap, ranging from 01.01.2019 to 01.01.2020. Instead of taking the usual daily closing values, a three-day median base-value may partially account for the substantial volatility of the assets.

Table 1 - Comparison of quarterly price changes for the ten largest assets by market capitalisation

TICKER

NAME

Q1 CHANGE

Q2 CHANGE

Q3 CHANGE

Q4 CHANGE

ANNUAL CHANGE

Bitcoin

5.91%

151.11%

-26.10%

-13.24%

+86.78%

Ethereum

-4.25%

97.32%

-40.91%

-26.29%

-12.60%

XRP

-15.67%

24.50%

-39.13%

-22.76%

-46.92%

Litecoin

87.48%

69.56%

-54.43%

-25.43%

+29.50%

Bitcoin Cash

1.85%

82.16%

-45.69%

-8.14%

+24.91%

BNB

179.80%

81.18%

-51.82%

-13.05%

+127.56%

EOS

-8.12%

27.54%

-52.19%

-12.22%

-4.66%

Stellar Lumens

-7.59%

-6.23%

-43.49%

-23.14%

-60.78%

Monero

8.23%

48.58%

-35.41%

-18.64%

-9.27%

Cardano

63.06%

5.35%

-53.53%

-14.11%

-23.58%

Source: Binance Research, Binance.com

Only four of the largest 19 cryptoassets by market capitalisation - BNB, Tezos, Huobi Token, and Chainlink - showed higher price appreciations than Bitcoin over 2019. This is also represented in an increasing Bitcoin market dominance (see chart 1). After the Bitcoin market dominance peaked in Q3 2019, it slowly declined in the fourth quarter of the year. Over the course of the entire year, however, the Bitcoin market dominance climbed from 52% at the beginning of the year to 68% at the end of the year.

Chart 1 - Development of the Bitcoin market dominance over the course of 2019

chart1

This market dominance is put in perspective against Bitcoin trading dominance, which is the second focal point of this section’s analysis. Our previously introduced definition is kept, describing Bitcoin trading dominance as:

“Bitcoin trading dominance represents the respective volume contribution from Bitcoin trading, with BTC as a base currency, relative to the total spot volume on a platform (e.g., Binance).”

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

Chart 2 - Development of the Bitcoin trading dominance on Binance.com over 2019

chart2

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

This ratio started close to 20% on January 1st 2019, and briefly fell to 10% in March 2019. Subsequently, only 10% of the trading volume was against BTC (as a base asset). Since then, this ratio kept increasing, reaching new highs above 45-50% and subsequently stabilizing at roughly 40% for the rest of the year.

Dividing the Bitcoin trading dominance by the Bitcoin marketcap dominance is an indicator for relative interest in Bitcoin. Thus, it may allow for a general estimation of the current market perception of altcoins. This indicator is displayed below, in chart 3.

Chart 3 - Bitcoin trading dominance divided by Bitcoin marketcap dominance

chart3

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

2. Correlation analysis of large-cap assets

A correlation analysis may provide insights for portfolio management. Fundamentally, a correlation can be defined as:

“Correlation statistically measures the strength of a linear relationship between two relative movements of two variables and ranges from -1 to +1.”

In general, assets with a correlation above 0.5 or below -0.5 are considered to have strong positive/negative associations. Similarly, a close-to-zero correlation indicates a lack of linear relationship between two variables, and for this analysis, the returns of two assets.

If the returns of two assets do exhibit a positive correlation, it implies that these two assets tend to move in the same direction, and therefore share similar risks. On the other hand, a negative correlation between the returns of two assets indicates that the two assets move in opposite directions, and it is thus possible to use one asset as a hedge against the other.

2.1 Analysis of large-cap cryptoassets for Q4 2019

In this report, 20 of the largest cryptoassets (excluding stablecoins) were selected based on their median market capitalization over the fourth quarter of 2019.

Chart 4 - Correlations of USD daily returns of twenty large-cap cryptoassets between October 1st and January 1st 2019

chart4

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

As depicted in the above chart, correlations between all pairs are always positive. Curiously, Tezos (XTZ) is the least correlated asset with a median correlation coefficient of only 0.3.

Similarly to the behavior in previous quarters, correlations between all pairs are typically more significant amongst the largest cryptoassets. For instance, Ethereum (ETH) and Bitcoin (BTC) displayed a correlation coefficient of 0.86 over the fourth quarter of 2019. Additionally, Ether continues its reign as the most correlated asset (corr. coeff. of 0.75). However, this opposes a significantly higher previous quarterly correlation coefficient of 0.81.

2.2 Development of correlations over the past quarters

To put that into some perspective, the previous quarters and the respective changes in correlation coefficients are also assessed. Chart 5 shows the correlation matrix for the first quarter of 2019.

Chart 5 - Correlations of USD daily returns of twenty large-cap cryptoassets between December 31st 2018 and March 30th 2019

chart5

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

Chart 6 shows the changed correlation coefficients between the first and the second quarter of 2019. The intensity of the colors can be singled out as a very rough but easy guide to interpreting this matrix. Red fields show the smaller 50% of values, while blue fields display the higher values. The intensity of the color indicates the significance - the darkest red field entails the smallest value, whereas, on the other hand, a light-blue field indicates a smaller value of the larger value set. Hence, lightly colored fields are close to the median value of the set.

Applying this methodology to chart 6 shows predominantly lightly colored fields, indicating the absence of extremes. This can accordingly be interpreted in the way that most assets were similarly strong correlated in quarter one and quarter two of 2019. Simply put, correlations largely stayed the same.

Another apparent conclusion from visually inspecting the correlation matrix is that Bitcoin SV was the only asset to have significantly lower correlation coefficients (from Q2 to Q1). This extraordinary behaviour can be explained by the “major delistings from large exchanges” of Bitcoin SV. Further information on this can be found in the 2019 Q2 - Correlation Report of Binance Research.

Chart 6 - Change in correlation coefficients of USD daily returns of twenty large-cap cryptoassets between the first and the second quarter of 2019

chart6

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

Similarly, chart 7 and chart 8 respectively represent the changes between Q3 and Q2, and Q4 and Q3.

Chart 7 - Change in correlation coefficients of USD daily returns of twenty large-cap cryptoassets between the second and the third quarter of 2019

chart7

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

Chart 8 - Change in correlation coefficients of USD daily returns of twenty large-cap cryptoassets between the third and the fourth quarter of 2019

chart8

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

The most significant insight is that the largest change in asset correlations occurred in the third quarter of 2019. Based on manual inspection of the correlation matrices, this indicates that assets might be stronger correlated with each other in adverse market movements of the price. Coherently, cryptoassets are less correlated with each other in up- or sidewards movements. Further analysis over a more extended period could substantiate this finding.

2.3 Correlation analysis of large-cap cryptoassets for 2019

A first overview of the annual development of correlating assets is given in table 2 and chart 10. More precisely, table 2 shows quarterly average correlation coefficients for the five highest correlating assets, as well as BNB.

Table 2 - Comparison of quarterly average correlation coefficients for the five highest correlating assets

TICKER

NAME

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

TOTAL

ETH

Ethereum

0.66

0.66

0.76

0.75

0.69

ADA

Cardano

0.64

0.64

0.74

0.70

0.65

EOS

EOS

0.64

0.64

0.72

0.74

0.66

LTC

Litecoin

0.60

0.60

0.74

0.74

0.64

XRP

XRP

0.64

0.64

0.72

0.67

0.64

BNB

BNB

0.42

0.42

0.70

0.71

0.53

This preliminary overview of the correlations over 2019 is complemented by chart 9. The chart shows the overall trend of the correlation coefficients of the 20 largest cryptoassets by market cap. The average correlation coefficient of BNB is highlighted in gold.

Chart 9 - Average quarterly correlation coefficients of twenty large-cap cryptoassets in 2019

chart9

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

To deepen the analysis, the correlation matrix depicted in chart 10 is best assessed.

Chart 10 - Correlations of USD daily returns of twenty large-cap cryptoassets between January 1st 2019 and January 1st 2020

chart10

Source: Binance Research, CoinMarketCap

As depicted in the chart above, correlations for all pairs are always positive. Generally, the trend of Q4 translates onto the correlations for the entire year 2019. While Ethereum (ETH) is still the highest correlated asset (coefficient of 0.69), Ether was much less correlated in the first half of 2019 (Q1 w. 0.66, Q2 w. 0.66) and only took this leading position in the second half (Q3 w. 0.76, Q4 w. 0.75).

The lowest correlated asset, Cosmos (ATOM), has a correlation coefficient of 0.31, closely followed by Chainlink (LINK) and Tezos (XTZ) with coefficients of 0.32, respectively, 0.4. One differentiating factor between Cosmos and the other large-cap cryptoassets is the listing time - Cosmos only got launched and listed during the end of Q1 2019. As the median correlation of ATOMs appears to be increasing - annual corr. coeff. of 0.31 for 2019 with a coefficient of 0.56 for Q4 2019 -, the lower listing time might be one factor to explain this phenomenon.

Additionally, in a similar fashion to our previous reports, several general factors are found that likely influence the strengths of relationships between cryptoassets. These and other specific relationships are listed below:

  • Besides Ethereum (ETH), Bitcoin (BTC) was strongest correlated with Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Monero (XMR), two other PoW cryptoassets.

  • Programmable blockchains (e.g., NEO, Ethereum, EOS) often exhibited higher correlations with each other than with non-programmable assets. This trend continued in the same way as in previous quarters.

  • “Binance Effect": assets listed on Binance displayed higher correlations than with the cryptoassets not listed on Binance.

  • After Cosmos (ATOM), Huobi Token (HT) had - on median - the lowest correlation with other cryptoassets.

3. Conclusion

The median correlation between most large cryptoassets slightly declined over the fourth quarter of 2019. This trend upholds the annual median correlation, which is lower than in Q3 or Q4. Nonetheless, cryptoassets remained highly correlated with each other in 2019.

In line with our previous reports, idiosyncratic factors such as programmable blockchains and the existence of a potential “Binance Effect” remain some of the critical factors impacting the strength of correlations among cryptoassets. Additionally, Ethereum became the most relevant benchmark of the crypto-market in 2019, displaying the highest median correlation with all other cryptoassets.

Further research could assess whether median correlations among cryptoassets are affected by the current market price movement. This first evidence indicates that cryptoassets might be stronger correlated with each other in market movements negatively affecting the price of cryptoassets.