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#Gate广场四月发帖挑战
Does a sharp decline in the A-shares market affect the crypto world? Yes, but overall it is weakly correlated, with emotional contagion being the main factor. It’s not simply synchronized or inverse movement.
1. Core Relationship: Weak correlation + Extreme Market Declines
- Daily: Basically independent
A-shares are mainly influenced by domestic policies, economy, liquidity, and regulation; the crypto market (BTC/ETH) primarily depends on Federal Reserve interest rates, dollar liquidity, global risk appetite, halving/ETFs, and regulation.
Daily fluctuations generally follow their own paths, with no stable “see-saw” effect.
- During panic/major drops: Tend to fall together (risk appetite drops simultaneously)
When there is tightening of global liquidity, expectations of financial crises, black swan events, or extreme panic:
- Funds will sell off all high-risk assets (stocks, cryptocurrencies, high-yield bonds)
- A-shares plunge → panic spreads → crypto market often declines as well
Typical examples: February 2026, October 2025, and other “stock-coin double kills.”
2. Three pathways through which A-shares’ decline impacts the crypto market
1. Emotional contagion (most significant)
A-shares crash → widespread financial news → investor panic → reduce holdings of all high-risk assets → selling pressure and decline in crypto.
2. Cross-market capital flow (small scale)
- Some Chinese investors trade both A-shares and crypto: A-shares are trapped/losses → sell crypto to cover losses/stop-loss/withdraw → crypto market faces pressure
- In extreme bear markets: a small amount of capital moves from A-shares to safer assets abroad → small inflow into crypto (but limited by foreign exchange controls)
3. Sector linkage (“crypto concept stocks” in A-shares)
A-shares related to digital currency, blockchain, payments, and encryption (such as Cuiwei Co., Lakala, Hailian Jinhui):
- Crypto market crashes → these A-shares tend to fall as well
- Overall A-shares decline → these sectors also find it hard to be immune
3. Why isn’t it simply “A-shares fall, crypto rises”?
- Capital pools are basically separate: A-shares involve RMB and domestic funds; crypto involves global USD/stablecoin funds.
- Regulatory firewall: China bans cryptocurrency trading/mining, preventing large-scale legal fund transfers.
- Different driving logic:
- A-shares: policies, corporate performance, domestic liquidity
- Crypto: Federal Reserve policies, institutional funds, global regulation, halving cycles
4. How to view the current situation in 2026 (April)?
- Recently, A-shares have experienced small declines (Shanghai Composite index down about 1%):
- Limited impact on crypto, mostly minor emotional suppression
- If there is a single-day drop in A-shares >3%, with thousands of stocks hitting limit down, or systemic panic:
- Crypto likely to follow short-term (BTC/ETH 3%–8%), leverage contracts may face liquidation
- If it’s just structural adjustments or a slow bear market:
- Crypto will mostly remain unaffected, following its own halving/ETF logic
5. Summary in one sentence
A-shares’ big drop does not necessarily mean crypto will rise; in fact, during extreme panic, they tend to fall together. Daily, they are weakly correlated, with crypto mainly influenced by the Federal Reserve and global liquidity.