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Essentially, the market is reacting to the transmission chain of “trade protectionism escalation—deterioration of the global economic outlook—decline in risk appetite.” Cryptocurrencies, especially Bitcoin, exhibit a strong correlation with traditional tech stocks (represented by the Nasdaq index) and safe-haven assets (represented by gold), revealing their current positioning in the eyes of macro traders: they are high-beta risk assets rather than the safe-haven assets many once believed.
When Trump issues new tariff threats (such as imposing high tariffs on the EU and Japan) or signs “reciprocal tariff” executive orders, the market immediately prices in the following expectations:
1. **Global trade contraction**: Tariff barriers will hinder global trade and drag down economic growth.
2. **Resurgence of inflation pressures**: Rising costs of imported goods may push inflation higher again, complicating the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy decisions. The rate-cut cycle might be delayed or shortened, and the expectation of maintaining higher interest rates for longer (“Higher for Longer”) will intensify. The tightening of liquidity is directly bearish for risk assets.
3. **Safe-haven sentiment heats up**: Investors, worried about economic uncertainty, will reduce exposure to stocks, cryptocurrencies, and other risk assets, instead flocking to safe-haven assets like gold and government bonds.
This is the fundamental reason why we see the pattern “tariff threats → US stocks fall, Nasdaq futures fall → Bitcoin falls along with them → gold rises” repeatedly playing out. The cryptocurrency market, especially with its large leverage and quantitative trading programs, quickly captures and amplifies these traditional market sentiment swings, leading to “flash crashes.”
However, this relationship is not unidirectional or linear. When tariff threats are “within expectations” or policies are “reversed,” market reactions can be quite different.
* **“Good news already priced in” rebound**: If tariff policies are already anticipated and fully priced in (such as the steel and aluminum tariffs on February 11), the market may rebound when the policies are actually implemented, as uncertainty is resolved.
* **Policy “sudden U-turn”**: The most extreme example was Trump’s sudden suspension of tariffs on April 9 last year, which was interpreted by the market as a major signal of risk appetite shift, leading to a revenge rally in global risk assets. Due to the 24/7 trading nature of cryptocurrencies, their response was even more rapid than traditional equities.
These series of events demonstrate that the cryptocurrency market has become deeply integrated into the global macro-financial system. Its price discovery is no longer solely driven by on-chain activity or industry narratives but is largely influenced by traditional macroeconomic events, geopolitical developments, and fiscal and monetary policy expectations. Traders now need to monitor social media accounts of Trump and tariff policy developments as closely as they follow Federal Reserve meetings.
For future judgments, the key is to distinguish between “anticipated” and “unexpected” events. Ongoing trade frictions and moderate tariff escalations may be gradually absorbed by the market and establish new benchmarks. However, any protectionist policies that surpass current market expectations and are more aggressive could trigger the next cross-market safe-haven wave. In such an environment, high volatility in cryptocurrencies will become the norm.