Bitcoin's price movements are often not just about market sentiment.
Many believe that Japan's rate hikes are a thing of the past, but have you ever wondered—why are hedge funds and emerging companies still continuously buying BTC? On the surface, it's for hedging, but in reality, there's a deeper capital logic behind it.
Imagine the cryptocurrency market as a piggy bank of capital. When capital faces liquidity needs and needs to fill gaps, this piggy bank gets shattered. All the money is withdrawn. The laws of macroeconomic operation actually hint at this.
Recently, I noticed an interesting phenomenon: some old-school altcoins suddenly surge collectively. What's the logic behind this? I spent a lot of time crawling on-chain liquidity pool data, setting filters for addresses with no fund movement for 1-3 years. The result showed that at the moment an interest rate hike cycle begins, these addresses start withdrawing liquidity in bulk.
This signal is very important. Behind many mainstream liquidity pools are long-term investments from small funds and institutions, who borrow funds in yen to earn liquidity fees. Now they are collectively withdrawing—what does this mean? Risk awareness is awakening.
Seemingly prosperous moments are often the easiest to deceive the eye. But those who truly understand the market know: capital has a mind of its own. When cycles meet macroeconomics, they act in advance. When risk signals just start to appear, they are already fleeing at full speed. That’s why it’s important to follow the cycle, rather than be fooled by short-term prosperity.
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PanicSeller
· 12h ago
Institutions are running, and we're still taking the bait haha
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ForkMonger
· 12h ago
the liquidity pool exodus data is the real tell here—institutions don't move that fast without knowing something we don't yet
Reply0
ShortingEnthusiast
· 12h ago
Alright, I've heard the story of big institutions running early so many times, and they always make it sound so convincing.
The institutional withdrawal of liquidity is indeed interesting this time, but the "small change jar" theory is way too simplified...
Don't always focus on on-chain data; the real money has long been out of the circle.
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GateUser-cff9c776
· 12h ago
Here we go again, that capital logic... It's nicely called "advance action," but in reality, it's just institutions preying on retail investors. I don't buy it; next week will continue to surge.
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HodlVeteran
· 12h ago
Listening to your advice is better than reading ten years of on-chain data... I was taught this way back in 2017. Now, seeing institutions withdraw in batches, I can't help but be excited. This time, I have to follow the smart money [dog head]
Bitcoin's price movements are often not just about market sentiment.
Many believe that Japan's rate hikes are a thing of the past, but have you ever wondered—why are hedge funds and emerging companies still continuously buying BTC? On the surface, it's for hedging, but in reality, there's a deeper capital logic behind it.
Imagine the cryptocurrency market as a piggy bank of capital. When capital faces liquidity needs and needs to fill gaps, this piggy bank gets shattered. All the money is withdrawn. The laws of macroeconomic operation actually hint at this.
Recently, I noticed an interesting phenomenon: some old-school altcoins suddenly surge collectively. What's the logic behind this? I spent a lot of time crawling on-chain liquidity pool data, setting filters for addresses with no fund movement for 1-3 years. The result showed that at the moment an interest rate hike cycle begins, these addresses start withdrawing liquidity in bulk.
This signal is very important. Behind many mainstream liquidity pools are long-term investments from small funds and institutions, who borrow funds in yen to earn liquidity fees. Now they are collectively withdrawing—what does this mean? Risk awareness is awakening.
Seemingly prosperous moments are often the easiest to deceive the eye. But those who truly understand the market know: capital has a mind of its own. When cycles meet macroeconomics, they act in advance. When risk signals just start to appear, they are already fleeing at full speed. That’s why it’s important to follow the cycle, rather than be fooled by short-term prosperity.