As the Chinese New Year approaches, short-term market pressure has become a foregone conclusion. In the next 1 to 3 months, we may see several scenarios: a brief rebound, a rapid decline, or sideways consolidation, but the overall trend remains weak.
Looking at the macro environment makes it clear. The US dollar is strengthening, A-shares are approaching the 4000-point mark, and the RMB has appreciated to 6.8 (which means the U.S. dollar is depreciating). None of these are positive signals.
On the surface, there might still be a wave of market activity before the New Year, but what's really happening? Institutions and large investors are cashing out for the holiday. Don't forget, Chinese people make up the majority of crypto investors, and the traditional Spring Festival means big spending—buying cars, home improvements, visiting relatives and friends. Participants who have been invested all year are now cashing out to recover their funds.
The result is: trading volume continues to shrink, and funds keep flowing out. This trend is unlikely to reverse in the short term.
Friends still averaging down and opening long positions should wake up. Instead of dreaming of a big rally, it's better to short at the highs for some steady gains. Otherwise, on the first day of the New Year, you'll really have to empty your wallet to cover losses.
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0xSherlock
· 13h ago
Institutions have already left, retail investors are still dreaming.
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WalletManager
· 13h ago
On-chain data is all there, and capital outflow is indeed obvious. My multi-signature wallet has already adjusted its positions. Instead of holding onto declining chips, it's better to lock in profits.
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digital_archaeologist
· 13h ago
Here we go again, I'm tired of hearing the excuse that institutions are cashing out.
Shorting at the high? Are you sure you're not just gambling?
During the Spring Festival, only retail investors emptied their wallets; big funds have long since exited.
That's what they say, but I'm still bottom-fishing... what should I do?
Rather than sitting on the sidelines and watching the show, it's better to hold some spot assets and be steady.
The 6.8 level is really risky; it feels like it might drop further.
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ETH_Maxi_Taxi
· 13h ago
Honestly, those still buying at the bottom are just naive retail investors.
It's the same old institutional dumping routine, I'm really tired of hearing it.
If they keep dumping before the Spring Festival, it might just crash completely.
Making money isn't that easy; better to secure profits first.
A big rebound before the New Year? I think it's unlikely; funds have already moved out.
Instead of waiting for a surge, it's better to short steadily and earn some guaranteed returns.
On the first day of the Lunar New Year, I still have red envelopes to give; losing money would really make me cry.
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RektDetective
· 13h ago
Here we go again with this set? I believe in cashing out before the New Year, but is it really so certain?
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I agree that the main consumption during the Spring Festival is significant, but will institutions really sell everything at this time? That's too naive.
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Shorting at the high? That's laughable. Last time someone said that, they got liquidated.
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It's true that the dollar is strong and the yuan is depreciating, but why does it have to be all bad news?
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Trading volume has indeed shrunk, but is this rebound really going to end so abruptly?
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Honestly, no one dares to take over the position. Let's see on the eighth day of the lunar new year.
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I just want to ask, how did you operate this wave yourself?
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Such rhetoric happens every year before the New Year; anyway, I no longer believe it.
As the Chinese New Year approaches, short-term market pressure has become a foregone conclusion. In the next 1 to 3 months, we may see several scenarios: a brief rebound, a rapid decline, or sideways consolidation, but the overall trend remains weak.
Looking at the macro environment makes it clear. The US dollar is strengthening, A-shares are approaching the 4000-point mark, and the RMB has appreciated to 6.8 (which means the U.S. dollar is depreciating). None of these are positive signals.
On the surface, there might still be a wave of market activity before the New Year, but what's really happening? Institutions and large investors are cashing out for the holiday. Don't forget, Chinese people make up the majority of crypto investors, and the traditional Spring Festival means big spending—buying cars, home improvements, visiting relatives and friends. Participants who have been invested all year are now cashing out to recover their funds.
The result is: trading volume continues to shrink, and funds keep flowing out. This trend is unlikely to reverse in the short term.
Friends still averaging down and opening long positions should wake up. Instead of dreaming of a big rally, it's better to short at the highs for some steady gains. Otherwise, on the first day of the New Year, you'll really have to empty your wallet to cover losses.