
A new academic study has determined that (unsurprisingly) digital assets do not act as an independent hedge against traditional finance, and Wall Street is still firmly in the driver’s seat.
The price action of altcoins of the likes of XRP is being mainly dictated by traditional stocks, government bonds, and sovereign risk measures.
The peer-reviewed paper, published in the Journal of Risk and Financial Management in April 2026, has relied on advanced statistical methods on daily market data spanning from 2018 to early 2026.
The researchers at Yildiz Technical University mapped the “information flow” across seven major financial segments. The data included the top ten cryptocurrencies (notably featuring the Ripple-linked XRP), G10 stock market indices, commodities, tech stocks, and government bond yields.
Traditional financial segments, specifically G10 stock market indices, ten-year government bond yields, and five-year Credit Default Swaps (CDS), are the main transmitters of market signals.
At the same time, cryptocurrencies tend to have a much weaker influence. Tokens like XRP mainly absorb shocks and follow the trends set by traditional assets, meaning that they act as receivers of signals.
The researchers have found that a major crisis can rapidly scramble market hierarchies. The directional flow of influence can actually reverse during various black swan events.
For example, sovereign risk indicators (like CDS) can suddenly become the leading indicators that drive stock and crypto prices during various crises.
The researchers used a combination of Transfer Entropy and Independent Component Analysis (ICA) to isolate unfiltered relationships between asset classes and filter out all the noise.
The bottom line is that crypto portfolios remain deeply anchored to traditional stocks and bonds, and it does not seem like this is likely to change in the near future.






