On Christmas Eve, major U.S. stock indices collectively celebrate. In the early close trading session on Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 both hit new all-time highs, perfectly stepping into the "Santa Rally" rhythm. Blue-chip stocks are strong—Apple rose slightly by 0.53%, Micron Technology surged by 3.77%, and the narrative around AI hardware remains hot.
However, the story in the crypto sector is completely different. Once synchronized with the U.S. stock market, crypto concept stocks have now fully entered a downtrend. MSTR only barely followed the rally with a gain of 0.53%; COIN dropped by 1.06%; BMNR was hit hardest with a decline of 1.41%. It looks like a "cooling off on Christmas Eve."
The core logic behind this is quite clear. As the U.S. long holiday approaches, institutional funds are consciously withdrawing from high-volatility assets like crypto and shifting toward more stable traditional sectors. This is both a routine risk-off move before the holiday and reflects a deeper issue: with U.S. government agencies about to take a three-day break, the crypto market is about to lose Wall Street as its "stabilizing force," falling into a short-term liquidity vacuum.
The upcoming trend is worth pondering. Without the reference of the U.S. stock market, can BTC seize the opportunity to catch up and break free from constraints? Or will it be "hunted" during this liquidity vacuum? Is this divergence between crypto and stocks a short-term disturbance or a signal of a trend shift? The answer may only be revealed after the holiday.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
AltcoinMarathoner
· 13h ago
honestly the liquidity vacuum thesis hits different when you zoom out to weekly. institutions peeling back before the break = textbook accumulation phase setup if btc holds these levels.
Reply0
screenshot_gains
· 13h ago
Here comes the harvest again, the institutional escape before the holiday was too obvious.
View OriginalReply0
Layer2Arbitrageur
· 13h ago
ngl the liquidity vacuum analysis here is missing the real alpha - you're not accounting for MEV extraction opportunities during low-volume periods. institutions dumping 150bps of their position isn't bearish, it's an arb window if you've got proper cross-chain infrastructure set up.
Reply0
ser_ngmi
· 13h ago
The institution ran away early, and we're still here watching the show.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHarvester
· 14h ago
When institutions run away, retail investors should also run away.
View OriginalReply0
DecentralizedElder
· 14h ago
Institutions are really ruthless, they started harvesting profits before the holiday
---
It's another liquidity vacuum; I'm tired of hearing this explanation
---
Whether BTC can rebound this time depends on Wall Street's attitude after the holiday
---
COIN has dropped over 1%, it's indeed a bit quiet
---
The bears are sharpening their knives, waiting for the holiday to end to strike
On Christmas Eve, major U.S. stock indices collectively celebrate. In the early close trading session on Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 both hit new all-time highs, perfectly stepping into the "Santa Rally" rhythm. Blue-chip stocks are strong—Apple rose slightly by 0.53%, Micron Technology surged by 3.77%, and the narrative around AI hardware remains hot.
However, the story in the crypto sector is completely different. Once synchronized with the U.S. stock market, crypto concept stocks have now fully entered a downtrend. MSTR only barely followed the rally with a gain of 0.53%; COIN dropped by 1.06%; BMNR was hit hardest with a decline of 1.41%. It looks like a "cooling off on Christmas Eve."
The core logic behind this is quite clear. As the U.S. long holiday approaches, institutional funds are consciously withdrawing from high-volatility assets like crypto and shifting toward more stable traditional sectors. This is both a routine risk-off move before the holiday and reflects a deeper issue: with U.S. government agencies about to take a three-day break, the crypto market is about to lose Wall Street as its "stabilizing force," falling into a short-term liquidity vacuum.
The upcoming trend is worth pondering. Without the reference of the U.S. stock market, can BTC seize the opportunity to catch up and break free from constraints? Or will it be "hunted" during this liquidity vacuum? Is this divergence between crypto and stocks a short-term disturbance or a signal of a trend shift? The answer may only be revealed after the holiday.