The wails of 140,000 people getting liquidated have not yet dissipated, and the Candlestick Chart of the crypto market has begun a new round of fluctuation. Some are buying the dip, some are cutting loss, and some are waiting and watching. It resembles an endless casino, where human greed, fear, and luck cycle infinitely.
But history has long proven that no asset can exist outside of economic laws for a long time. When the U.S. economy transitions from "ICU" to "general ward", when the Federal Reserve's policies return to normal, and when retail investors finally realize that "getting rich through leverage" is just an illusion, the crypto market may welcome true maturity.
For ordinary investors, what they should do now may be to turn off their trading software and ask themselves: If virtual currency goes to zero tomorrow, will my life collapse? If the answer is "yes," then what you have invested is no longer "spare money," but "gambling money."
The market is always full of opportunities, but the premise is — you have to be alive to see the sun tomorrow. This may be the last revelation bought with blood and tears by the 140,000 who got liquidated.
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The wails of 140,000 people getting liquidated have not yet dissipated, and the Candlestick Chart of the crypto market has begun a new round of fluctuation. Some are buying the dip, some are cutting loss, and some are waiting and watching. It resembles an endless casino, where human greed, fear, and luck cycle infinitely.
But history has long proven that no asset can exist outside of economic laws for a long time. When the U.S. economy transitions from "ICU" to "general ward", when the Federal Reserve's policies return to normal, and when retail investors finally realize that "getting rich through leverage" is just an illusion, the crypto market may welcome true maturity.
For ordinary investors, what they should do now may be to turn off their trading software and ask themselves: If virtual currency goes to zero tomorrow, will my life collapse? If the answer is "yes," then what you have invested is no longer "spare money," but "gambling money."
The market is always full of opportunities, but the premise is — you have to be alive to see the sun tomorrow. This may be the last revelation bought with blood and tears by the 140,000 who got liquidated.