Competition of noise and collectivity in global cryptocurrency trading: route to a self-contained market
Stanis{\l}aw Dro\.zd\.z, Ludovico Minati, Pawe{\l} O\'swi\k{e}cimka,, Marek Stanuszek, Marcin W\k{a}torek

TL;DR
This study analyzes the correlation structure of the top cryptocurrencies, revealing how market dominance shifts over time and indicating the emergence of a self-contained crypto market similar to Forex.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of cross-correlations in cryptocurrency exchange rates, highlighting the role of specific currencies like Bitcoin in market organization.
Findings
Bitcoin's dominance increased around 2017
Correlation structure varies with the choice of base currency
The market shows signs of becoming self-contained and independent
Abstract
Cross-correlations in fluctuations of the daily exchange rates within the basket of the 100 highest-capitalization cryptocurrencies over the period October 1, 2015, through March 31, 2019, are studied. The corresponding dynamics predominantly involve one leading eigenvalue of the correlation matrix, while the others largely coincide with those of Wishart random matrices. However, the magnitude of the principal eigenvalue, and thus the degree of collectivity, strongly depends on which cryptocurrency is used as a base. It is largest when the base is the most peripheral cryptocurrency; when more significant ones are taken into consideration, its magnitude systematically decreases, nevertheless preserving a sizable gap with respect to the random bulk, which in turn indicates that the organization of correlations becomes more heterogeneous. This finding provides a criterion for recognizing…
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