Recently, geopolitical tensions have sharply escalated. Trump publicly stated his intention to gain control of Greenland and subsequently threatened to impose tariffs on certain European countries. These series of remarks have directly intensified international conflicts, prompting the EU to respond with a strong stance, and the global political risk index has noticeably risen.
Risk appetite has plummeted sharply, and markets are beginning to shift massively towards safe-haven modes. All of this is clearly reflected in the movement of cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin is at the forefront—its price has plummeted from near $95,000, with a lowest point exceeding $88,000, a total decline of over 7%, and it even briefly broke below the key support level of $90,000. Ethereum has also not been spared, retracing approximately 4-5%. A wave of liquidations followed, with leveraged traders frequently stopping losses, and the entire market capitalization evaporated by hundreds of billions of dollars in a short period.
Interestingly, traditional safe-haven assets have shown a completely different trend. Spot gold prices have risen against the trend, continuously hitting new all-time highs, even breaking through the seemingly steep $4,800 per ounce mark. Large amounts of capital have rapidly flowed from high-risk crypto markets into precious metals.
This phenomenon reveals a real issue: during times of rising global political and economic uncertainty, although cryptocurrencies have many supporters, their status as a safe-haven asset still lags far behind traditional assets like gold. Investors, in true panic, still habitually turn to those safe assets that have been proven over thousands of years. This is a thought-provoking topic for the long-term positioning of the crypto market.
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LongTermDreamer
· 5h ago
Haha, this wave is just a shakeout. We've played this way three years ago, history always repeats itself. Gold rises while we fall? Normal, it's a panic moment. Once the storm passes, funds will still flow back in. The liquidity in crypto is too strong, brothers can't stop it.
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NestedFox
· 5h ago
It's the old story of gold taking off and the crypto market bloodbath. When it really comes down to the critical moment, everyone still trusts the gold approach...
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Greenland? This guy really dares to say that, the crypto market crashing together is truly an innocent victim.
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Gold has already broken through 4800, while BTC is still struggling at 88k. The gap has suddenly appeared.
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Leverage traders are once again being liquidated, the bloody lessons are repeated every time...
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To put it simply, when panic sets in, no one is optimistic about crypto, and that's the most heartbreaking part.
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When the risk subsides, crypto will fly again. This cycle of repeatedly cutting leeks continues.
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The funds that are bottom-fishing for gold this time are quite smart, much better than blindly bottom-fishing for coins.
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Isn't BTC called digital gold? Why did it drop the ball at the critical moment?
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MoonBoi42
· 5h ago
Gold won again, and we're still losing here.
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ETH_Maxi_Taxi
· 5h ago
It's the same old story. When a real crisis hits, gold wins. Why hasn't anyone seriously developed on-chain gold yet?
Recently, geopolitical tensions have sharply escalated. Trump publicly stated his intention to gain control of Greenland and subsequently threatened to impose tariffs on certain European countries. These series of remarks have directly intensified international conflicts, prompting the EU to respond with a strong stance, and the global political risk index has noticeably risen.
Risk appetite has plummeted sharply, and markets are beginning to shift massively towards safe-haven modes. All of this is clearly reflected in the movement of cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin is at the forefront—its price has plummeted from near $95,000, with a lowest point exceeding $88,000, a total decline of over 7%, and it even briefly broke below the key support level of $90,000. Ethereum has also not been spared, retracing approximately 4-5%. A wave of liquidations followed, with leveraged traders frequently stopping losses, and the entire market capitalization evaporated by hundreds of billions of dollars in a short period.
Interestingly, traditional safe-haven assets have shown a completely different trend. Spot gold prices have risen against the trend, continuously hitting new all-time highs, even breaking through the seemingly steep $4,800 per ounce mark. Large amounts of capital have rapidly flowed from high-risk crypto markets into precious metals.
This phenomenon reveals a real issue: during times of rising global political and economic uncertainty, although cryptocurrencies have many supporters, their status as a safe-haven asset still lags far behind traditional assets like gold. Investors, in true panic, still habitually turn to those safe assets that have been proven over thousands of years. This is a thought-provoking topic for the long-term positioning of the crypto market.