#数字资产市场动态 $BTC trend shows that the phenomenon of low turnover rate is quite obvious. Short-term traders are offloading chips, but long-term holders remain very steady, with no signs of panic deepening. The risk from the tariff wave has been temporarily alleviated, and now it has become a tug-of-war at the policy level.
The chip structure remains very stable, and there are no signs of collapse. More interestingly, a large amount of chips are accumulating around $90,000. The concentration in the $83,000 to $92,000 range is a bit excessive, and holders clearly have little desire to sell.
This morning, Trump’s side directly TACO (thinking they found a way out), but Europe didn’t cooperate smoothly and instead responded with tough words. Just be a bit softer, but they insisted on fighting back verbally—what happened? Europe started to get serious about US assets. The head of a Nordic pension fund straightforwardly stated that the risk premium for holding US assets has increased.
Now the market is again in a difficult situation. Although the tariff pressure has dissipated, if Europe continues to withdraw from US assets, the impact will be significant. Once European funds shift US assets from low-risk allocations to high-risk premium modes, US stocks, US bonds, and the dollar—these three anchors—will all come under pressure simultaneously.
From a technical perspective, consider going long when the price dips to around 84,780-83,780, and look at the rebound target in the 88,900-93,000 range.
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SneakyFlashloan
· 8h ago
The accumulation of chips around 90,000 indicates that big players are still confident. The key is whether Europe will really ditch American capital, as that would be the real game-changer.
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WalletDivorcer
· 10h ago
The chip accumulation is around 90,000, and long-term holders are holding steady. This is what a bottom should look like.
Europe's move was really ruthless. Trump softened, but was instead aggressively eaten up. Risk premium has increased. Can US bonds and US stocks still stay stable?
84-83 long position, I believe in this logic, but I'm worried about another issue with the funding situation.
A low turnover rate is actually a good sign, indicating no panic among investors. It's just short-term traders doing T.
The wave of tariffs was a false alarm. The real trouble now is geopolitical policies, which are harder to predict than numbers.
The chip structure is indeed stable, with no signs of a sell-off. Instead, it looks like it's gathering strength.
Trump wants to make peace again, but Europe refuses to let him have his way. This situation is indeed uncomfortable.
How to break through the 90,000 resistance level? It still depends on Europe's attitude.
The bottom pattern is in place, now we just need a trigger point.
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ContractHunter
· 10h ago
Long-term holders are steadily rising, which is the real confidence booster for the chips. Conversely, political bluster has become the biggest variable.
Europe stands firm, and US capital must lower prices to sell off. This wave has changed the landscape.
Buying around 84K is a possible strategy, but be cautious of repeated inflows and outflows of European and American funds.
Short-term panic sellers are rushing to exit, but the most terrifying scenario is long-term complacency.
Trump's recent moves are truly reckless; he was given a clear path, yet he insisted on forcing the issue.
What does a pile of chips at 90K indicate? It just means no one wants to dump, or they simply can't.
Are US bonds and US stocks both under pressure at the same time? That’s the real highlight—much more interesting than just BTC’s movement.
The removal of tariff risks makes things even more uncomfortable; at least now there is a clear enemy.
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RunWhenCut
· 10h ago
The chips are stable, but I'm worried that Europe's move to truly bottom out might influence US capital, and then BTC could be affected.
#数字资产市场动态 $BTC trend shows that the phenomenon of low turnover rate is quite obvious. Short-term traders are offloading chips, but long-term holders remain very steady, with no signs of panic deepening. The risk from the tariff wave has been temporarily alleviated, and now it has become a tug-of-war at the policy level.
The chip structure remains very stable, and there are no signs of collapse. More interestingly, a large amount of chips are accumulating around $90,000. The concentration in the $83,000 to $92,000 range is a bit excessive, and holders clearly have little desire to sell.
This morning, Trump’s side directly TACO (thinking they found a way out), but Europe didn’t cooperate smoothly and instead responded with tough words. Just be a bit softer, but they insisted on fighting back verbally—what happened? Europe started to get serious about US assets. The head of a Nordic pension fund straightforwardly stated that the risk premium for holding US assets has increased.
Now the market is again in a difficult situation. Although the tariff pressure has dissipated, if Europe continues to withdraw from US assets, the impact will be significant. Once European funds shift US assets from low-risk allocations to high-risk premium modes, US stocks, US bonds, and the dollar—these three anchors—will all come under pressure simultaneously.
From a technical perspective, consider going long when the price dips to around 84,780-83,780, and look at the rebound target in the 88,900-93,000 range.