#比特币战略储备 Seeing Saylor send signals again, this time the "orange or green" is indeed interesting. Over the past few years observing his operational patterns, every public statement like this is backed by logic—not just casually posting a question.
To be honest, after experiencing several bull and bear cycles, my attitude towards such information has shifted from the past "immediately follow the trend" to the current "confirm the logic." The institutional-level strategies represented by Saylor and retail FOMO speculation are essentially two different things. They care about long-term strategic reserves, not short-term fluctuations. That’s also why I now pay more attention to the "depth" of holdings rather than the "frequency" of buying and selling.
However, we need to be cautious: every time a celebrity or major holder issues a "positive signal," some projects tend to follow suit or market makers exploit the situation to create FOMO. The scammers’ favorite trick is to muddle through amid genuine information. So the key is to distinguish: institutional strategic allocation and short-term market speculation are two separate lines—never get caught up in the hype.
Players who truly last long are those who stay clear-headed amid this noise.
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#比特币战略储备 Seeing Saylor send signals again, this time the "orange or green" is indeed interesting. Over the past few years observing his operational patterns, every public statement like this is backed by logic—not just casually posting a question.
To be honest, after experiencing several bull and bear cycles, my attitude towards such information has shifted from the past "immediately follow the trend" to the current "confirm the logic." The institutional-level strategies represented by Saylor and retail FOMO speculation are essentially two different things. They care about long-term strategic reserves, not short-term fluctuations. That’s also why I now pay more attention to the "depth" of holdings rather than the "frequency" of buying and selling.
However, we need to be cautious: every time a celebrity or major holder issues a "positive signal," some projects tend to follow suit or market makers exploit the situation to create FOMO. The scammers’ favorite trick is to muddle through amid genuine information. So the key is to distinguish: institutional strategic allocation and short-term market speculation are two separate lines—never get caught up in the hype.
Players who truly last long are those who stay clear-headed amid this noise.