The Federal Reserve moved again today, directly injecting $16 billion into the banking system. How big is this number? Since the pandemic, this is the second-largest single injection after that one.
Let's look at the logic behind this: End-of-year liquidity tight? I'll fill the gap. Market short on funds? Keep pumping. Although officials say this is a short-term operation, the continuous liquidity supply is laying a cushion for risk assets—this has profound implications for the crypto market.
History is interesting. The Fed's large-scale repurchase agreements and quantitative easing in 2020 directly paved the way for Bitcoin's subsequent epic rally. Now, this logic is repeating: more money, higher asset prices naturally follow.
So, how should retail investors operate now?
First: Hold your spot positions in Bitcoin and Ethereum firmly, don't get shaken out by short-term fluctuations. Second: If the market faces short-term pressure, see it as an opportunity to build positions gradually. Third: Stay away from high-leverage contracts—initial liquidity releases often increase volatility, and the risk is significant.
The bull market's profits rely on liquidity as the "fuel." Keep your core positions safe and wait for this wave of dividends. The wealth train has already sounded its horn—are you ready to hop on or let it pass by?
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MetaReckt
· 5h ago
16 billion? Here we go again, just printing money anyway. I'm optimistic about BTC's long-term resilience.
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WalletDetective
· 5h ago
16 billion is being poured in this time, it's really going to loosen the water. The 2020 approach is coming back, I've already jumped on the bandwagon.
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AirdropHunter007
· 5h ago
16 billion poured in, and now they're starting to tell stories? I just want to know if this can last until the end of the year.
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NFTregretter
· 5h ago
16 billion poured in, and we're about to start this cycle of cutting leeks again. Really annoying.
The Federal Reserve moved again today, directly injecting $16 billion into the banking system. How big is this number? Since the pandemic, this is the second-largest single injection after that one.
Let's look at the logic behind this: End-of-year liquidity tight? I'll fill the gap. Market short on funds? Keep pumping. Although officials say this is a short-term operation, the continuous liquidity supply is laying a cushion for risk assets—this has profound implications for the crypto market.
History is interesting. The Fed's large-scale repurchase agreements and quantitative easing in 2020 directly paved the way for Bitcoin's subsequent epic rally. Now, this logic is repeating: more money, higher asset prices naturally follow.
So, how should retail investors operate now?
First: Hold your spot positions in Bitcoin and Ethereum firmly, don't get shaken out by short-term fluctuations. Second: If the market faces short-term pressure, see it as an opportunity to build positions gradually. Third: Stay away from high-leverage contracts—initial liquidity releases often increase volatility, and the risk is significant.
The bull market's profits rely on liquidity as the "fuel." Keep your core positions safe and wait for this wave of dividends. The wealth train has already sounded its horn—are you ready to hop on or let it pass by?