Many friends have been asking me the same question recently—during Federal Reserve rate hikes, should you move your coins? Are those projects claiming to be "unaffected by rate hikes" reliable? As more people ask these questions, I’ve noticed a pattern: novice investors are most likely to get burned at this stage.
What I want to say is that during a rate hike cycle, the risk level in the crypto market clearly increases. Those seemingly attractive returns and bottom-fishing opportunities often hide many tricks behind the scenes. Today, I’ll list the three most common pitfalls, along with real cases, in hopes of helping you avoid a few.
**First Pitfall: False Promises of "Independent Operation"**
Project teams love to do this—they boast to investors, "Our liquidity pool operates independently, and Federal Reserve policies don’t affect us." Honestly, this kind of rhetoric is pure bluff. As long as you’re involved in the crypto ecosystem, you can’t avoid the impact of dollar liquidity. A few years ago, one project tricked many into investing by claiming to have an independent reserve system, only to run away a few months later after funding dried up. Investors’ principal was lost. Remember one thing: in a rate hike environment, any project claiming to be "completely immune" is probably just harvesting.
**Second Pitfall: Chasing Gains and Selling Losses, Bottom-Fishing at the Wrong Time**
When prices drop, beginners can’t resist. Seeing Bitcoin fall from $30,000 to $25,000, they think they’ve found a bargain and put all their savings in. What happens next? Prices keep falling. In the end, they get caught in the middle of a dip, watching their balances shrink gradually. These painful examples happen every rate hike cycle in the market. The cost of blindly bottom-fishing is often more severe than we imagine.
**Third Pitfall: High-Yield Promises as a Harvest Trap**
During rate hikes, liquidity tightens, yet some platforms start throwing money into promotions, promising ultra-high annualized returns. The more unbelievable the promise, the more cautious you should be. These projects are either extremely risky themselves or won’t last long.
The common point among these pitfalls is that they all exploit novice traders’ eagerness to turn things around. The rate hike cycle is indeed a test period for the crypto market. Being cautious with allocations and controlling risks is far more worthwhile than chasing overnight riches.
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ZenZKPlayer
· 10h ago
It's the same set of "completely immune" nonsense again, I'm already tired of hearing it.
Newbies are easily fooled; all my friends around me have fallen into this trap.
Those who buy the dip at the waistline, they are really off the charts.
High returns are too good to be true, so don't touch them.
During rate hikes, you should lie low and not mess around.
Every time, someone asks me the same question, it's really annoying.
Basically, it's greed; the price of wanting to get rich overnight is just like this.
Those "independently operated" projects are all a routine.
Watching others buy the dip makes me feel sorry for them.
When liquidity is tight, it actually attracts more, and the tricks are deep.
View OriginalReply0
MemeCoinSavant
· 10h ago
according to my peer-reviewed analysis of desperation-driven market behavior, the statistical probability of retail investors fomo-ing into "immune to fed policy" projects is literally p < 0.001... which means it's basically guaranteed to happen lol
Reply0
TokenVelocityTrauma
· 10h ago
It's the same old spiel. I was fooled by this last year, and now just seeing the words "independent operation" makes me want to vomit.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseMigrant
· 10h ago
Another "completely immune" project, just listen and don't take it seriously
Many friends have been asking me the same question recently—during Federal Reserve rate hikes, should you move your coins? Are those projects claiming to be "unaffected by rate hikes" reliable? As more people ask these questions, I’ve noticed a pattern: novice investors are most likely to get burned at this stage.
What I want to say is that during a rate hike cycle, the risk level in the crypto market clearly increases. Those seemingly attractive returns and bottom-fishing opportunities often hide many tricks behind the scenes. Today, I’ll list the three most common pitfalls, along with real cases, in hopes of helping you avoid a few.
**First Pitfall: False Promises of "Independent Operation"**
Project teams love to do this—they boast to investors, "Our liquidity pool operates independently, and Federal Reserve policies don’t affect us." Honestly, this kind of rhetoric is pure bluff. As long as you’re involved in the crypto ecosystem, you can’t avoid the impact of dollar liquidity. A few years ago, one project tricked many into investing by claiming to have an independent reserve system, only to run away a few months later after funding dried up. Investors’ principal was lost. Remember one thing: in a rate hike environment, any project claiming to be "completely immune" is probably just harvesting.
**Second Pitfall: Chasing Gains and Selling Losses, Bottom-Fishing at the Wrong Time**
When prices drop, beginners can’t resist. Seeing Bitcoin fall from $30,000 to $25,000, they think they’ve found a bargain and put all their savings in. What happens next? Prices keep falling. In the end, they get caught in the middle of a dip, watching their balances shrink gradually. These painful examples happen every rate hike cycle in the market. The cost of blindly bottom-fishing is often more severe than we imagine.
**Third Pitfall: High-Yield Promises as a Harvest Trap**
During rate hikes, liquidity tightens, yet some platforms start throwing money into promotions, promising ultra-high annualized returns. The more unbelievable the promise, the more cautious you should be. These projects are either extremely risky themselves or won’t last long.
The common point among these pitfalls is that they all exploit novice traders’ eagerness to turn things around. The rate hike cycle is indeed a test period for the crypto market. Being cautious with allocations and controlling risks is far more worthwhile than chasing overnight riches.