Recently, the Federal Reserve has taken another round of actions—on December 30, it injected $16 billion into the market through overnight repurchase agreements, marking the second-largest liquidity injection since the pandemic. Some have asked whether this will help the crypto market? Let’s take a look.
It is said that Reserve Management Purchases (RMP) do not count as quantitative easing (QE), but in essence, it is an expansion of the balance sheet, which has a short-term transmission effect on high-risk assets. When money flows in, the cost of market funds decreases, and this liquidity may channel through institutional channels into crypto assets.
Looking at the current market, Bitcoin is around $87,000, with a 24-hour trading volume skyrocketing by 61.96%, and a price increase of 1.54%. More importantly, Bitcoin’s market dominance (BTC dominance) is as high as 59.35%, indicating it still holds the leading position, and other coins tend to follow when it rises.
Major data shows that institutions have quietly increased their holdings by 42,000 BTC to hedge against ETP outflows. Coupled with this liquidity boost, Bitcoin is likely to continue oscillating upward. Ethereum is expected to follow suit, but the strength won’t be too significant—DeFi ecosystem capital transmission has a time lag, and with perpetual contract basis so low right now, leveraged funds are also cautious about entering.
Don’t expect much from small and mid-cap coins. After a $6.8 billion injection previously, the crypto market experienced liquidations of $250 million within 24 hours. Deleveraging is still ongoing, and most altcoins are oscillating within a range, even weakening due to capital siphoning.
What’s the safest way to operate? Layered deployment is key:
For spot trading, you can hold a light position in Bitcoin, controlling your position at 50%-60%, with a stop-loss set at the $85,000 support level; on the derivatives side, stay away from high leverage, and operate within the current 45% volatility range.
For the long term, keep an eye on the ON RRP balance (currently still at $268.7 billion) and the SOFR-IORB spread. If liquidity continues to loosen, you can increase positions in mainstream coins like Ethereum; if the spread starts to widen, you should quickly reduce your risk exposure.
Finally, it’s important to clarify that the $160 billion scale is just the tip of the iceberg compared to the QE measures of 2020, and most of this money circulates within the banking system. It’s unlikely to trigger a trend-driven rally in the crypto space. Short-term trading must prioritize risk control.
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 5h ago
$16 billion sounds impressive, but in reality, it doesn't flow into the crypto space at all; the banking system has already absorbed that money.
Institutions are accumulating, retail investors are still chasing highs—it's always the same pattern.
Don't touch the clone projects; the liquidation wave isn't over yet.
To break $90K in this wave, it still depends on the Federal Reserve's stance; this is how it looks in the short term.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropLicker
· 5h ago
Already using this trick? When the Fed loosens monetary policy, they want to cut our leeks. Institutions have long been ambushing.
Institutions are quietly stacking BTC, and we're still debating whether to chase or not? So typical.
Altcoins are dead, BTC remains the leader, and the fate of following the trend is just like that.
160 billion is not even a scale; stop comforting yourself, brother.
Holding a small amount of Bitcoin is the true way; those with high leverage are already on the liquidation list.
Just watch the ON RRP, that’s the real indicator.
DeFi can't keep up with the rhythm; funds have already chosen BTC.
Wait for the spread to widen before running; this market won't last too long.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoCrazyGF
· 6h ago
Is it another round of pump? Wake up, that $160 billion isn't flowing into the crypto space at all; the banking system has just absorbed the money. Don't overthink it.
Institutions are accumulating Bitcoin, but retail investors still need to tighten their belts. High leverage really is just giving away money.
As for Ethereum's recent rally? Uh... probably going to be disappointed. DeFi funds can't keep up, and the contract basis has collapsed.
Don't touch altcoins now. There are so many poor souls being siphoned off everywhere, and the money from liquidations is flowing into the wallets of major players in the primary market.
I think the $85,000 level looks pretty shaky. If you're trading spot, go with 50% position; otherwise, you'll just be frustrated.
Spent half an hour reading this analysis, and the conclusion is... stay calm, don't FOMO? Laughable, just like last year.
The most ridiculous thing is some still believe this is truly quantitative easing. Come on, wake up. This is just the banks extending their lifeline.
View OriginalReply0
DegenWhisperer
· 6h ago
$16 billion poured in, but the crypto world is still the same. Is it really just the banking system hyping itself up?
Institutions are quietly accumulating Bitcoin, while retail investors are still debating whether to get on board.
Altcoins? Forget it, just wait to be siphoned off. Haha.
It feels like this liquidity dividend isn't even reaching the crypto space; those quietly making money are still the folks on Wall Street.
I see through the Federal Reserve's tactics. They claim it's not QE on the surface, but it's actually a disguised form of liquidity injection. The scale is just too small to matter.
I've noted the $85,000 support level. Holding a light spot position with BTC is really stable. Don't touch the derivatives market—it's hell.
When will DeFi truly connect with this wave of liquidity? Right now, it's just moving at a snail's pace.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeSurvivor
· 6h ago
16 billion invested and BTC only rose 1.54%? Haha, those bank folks probably kept all the money for themselves.
Altcoins are really just siphoning objects, don't touch them.
Institutions are accumulating BTC, so let's just benefit from it.
It's another conservative move... always say the same, but still get caught.
The ON RRP number is too scary, it feels like the Federal Reserve is patching one wall and tearing down another.
Forget about contract leverage; this market trend is just a repetitive torment.
Wait, will this time really be different? Or is it the same old story?
Buying Bitcoin is the right choice; everything else just gives trading platforms fees.
Recently, the Federal Reserve has taken another round of actions—on December 30, it injected $16 billion into the market through overnight repurchase agreements, marking the second-largest liquidity injection since the pandemic. Some have asked whether this will help the crypto market? Let’s take a look.
It is said that Reserve Management Purchases (RMP) do not count as quantitative easing (QE), but in essence, it is an expansion of the balance sheet, which has a short-term transmission effect on high-risk assets. When money flows in, the cost of market funds decreases, and this liquidity may channel through institutional channels into crypto assets.
Looking at the current market, Bitcoin is around $87,000, with a 24-hour trading volume skyrocketing by 61.96%, and a price increase of 1.54%. More importantly, Bitcoin’s market dominance (BTC dominance) is as high as 59.35%, indicating it still holds the leading position, and other coins tend to follow when it rises.
Major data shows that institutions have quietly increased their holdings by 42,000 BTC to hedge against ETP outflows. Coupled with this liquidity boost, Bitcoin is likely to continue oscillating upward. Ethereum is expected to follow suit, but the strength won’t be too significant—DeFi ecosystem capital transmission has a time lag, and with perpetual contract basis so low right now, leveraged funds are also cautious about entering.
Don’t expect much from small and mid-cap coins. After a $6.8 billion injection previously, the crypto market experienced liquidations of $250 million within 24 hours. Deleveraging is still ongoing, and most altcoins are oscillating within a range, even weakening due to capital siphoning.
What’s the safest way to operate? Layered deployment is key:
For spot trading, you can hold a light position in Bitcoin, controlling your position at 50%-60%, with a stop-loss set at the $85,000 support level; on the derivatives side, stay away from high leverage, and operate within the current 45% volatility range.
For the long term, keep an eye on the ON RRP balance (currently still at $268.7 billion) and the SOFR-IORB spread. If liquidity continues to loosen, you can increase positions in mainstream coins like Ethereum; if the spread starts to widen, you should quickly reduce your risk exposure.
Finally, it’s important to clarify that the $160 billion scale is just the tip of the iceberg compared to the QE measures of 2020, and most of this money circulates within the banking system. It’s unlikely to trigger a trend-driven rally in the crypto space. Short-term trading must prioritize risk control.