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What is true investment? This question is repeatedly asked in the crypto market.
Take BTC as an example. Since its inception, some people see it as digital gold and a store of value. From this perspective, it is considered an investment—you can observe the long-term trend, with institutional allocation ratios increasing and fundamentals supporting it. But others purely chase price fluctuations, entering and exiting based on short-term emotions. This behavior pattern is close to gambling. The same asset, the stance determines its nature.
As for market prediction? It is itself an information trading platform. You are betting whether the market’s collective judgment will be confirmed, which indeed has speculative elements. But if you participate in prediction positions based on informational advantage or in-depth research, believing that the market pricing is biased, then from a game theory perspective, it can also be considered a form of investment. The key is what you are betting on.
Meme coins are the most complex. Most meme projects indeed lack cash flow and fundamental support, with many chasing price increases and selling off. But if someone treats them as community assets or brand tokens, believing in the long-term value of community consensus, then although the risk is high, this logic chain is essentially a form of faith betting. However, frankly speaking, in the meme coin track, most participants’ behavior patterns are still closer to gambling—quick in and out, relying entirely on emotions and liquidity.
Ultimately, the boundary between investment and gambling is not in the asset itself, but in why you hold it and how you hold it.