Trump recently provided an interesting economic outlook: by 2026, the US will enter a new growth phase, with significant improvements in employment and income. Once this news broke, the market immediately sensed the scent of liquidity expansion—fiscal stimulus combined with accelerating economic growth, likely driving funds into stocks, cryptocurrencies, and other risk assets.
It seems everything is paving the way for a bull market, but the situation is not that simple.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve signaled the opposite. The probability of a rate cut in January has fallen to just 12%. Traders understand what this means: dovish expectations have been shattered, and the Fed’s tightening tools may be more resolute than previously thought. Liquidity leaders suddenly tighten, breaking previous expectations of a loose cycle.
The current situation is somewhat delicate. On one side is the economic stimulus plan from the president, vowing to push up asset prices; on the other side is the Fed wielding hawkish measures, refusing to loosen rate cuts. These opposing forces are pulling fiercely, and every statement from officials or data report can trigger intense market volatility.
The divergence in expectations between bulls and bears has been completely torn apart. In this environment, liquidity expectations are prone to short-term fluctuations. Will Trump’s bullish narrative dominate the overall trend, or will the tightening reality of the Fed prevail? The answer may lie in the upcoming policy battles.
Major opportunities often emerge during such policy splits. Increased volatility means higher risks, but also continuous opportunities for selection. What do you think will be the outcome of this showdown? Will it evolve into a bull market or a volatile sideways trend?
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
15 Likes
Reward
15
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
GasGasGasBro
· 18h ago
Damn, this is basically gambling on politics. Whoever wins can push the asset prices up.
View OriginalReply0
MemeKingNFT
· 19h ago
Isn't this just the rhythm of mainland China's ups and downs? Trump is bullish, the Federal Reserve is bearish, and retail investors are trembling in the middle.
Two forces are fighting each other, and on-chain data is completely incomprehensible. I can only go with the flow now.
To be honest, the 12% probability of rate cuts has long been pushed to the floor, and market sentiment has really been torn apart.
A bottom consensus simply cannot form. These fluctuations are perfect for a shakeout.
Blue-chip projects in the NFT space are all falling, indicating that funds are still fleeing outward.
I sensed the divergence in expectations two days ago, and now it has truly been realized.
During moments of policy divergence, both opportunities and risks are amplified. Be careful not to let retail investor mentality trap you.
The Federal Reserve is really hawkish, not giving Trump any face at all.
Let's wait and see how on-chain data develops. Going long right now is a bit risky.
View OriginalReply0
airdrop_whisperer
· 12-26 21:50
This wave of policy tug-of-war, to put it simply, is a gamble over whose words are more valuable... Trump making promises vs. the Federal Reserve holding the knife, and right in the middle is our wallets haha
View OriginalReply0
MetaMisery
· 12-26 08:51
Is the Federal Reserve turning dovish? A 12% chance of rate cuts? I'm thinking they're really going all out to push back...
View OriginalReply0
NFTFreezer
· 12-26 08:48
These two guys are tugging at the rope... Trump wants to let it go, Powell refuses to let go at all.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropDreamer
· 12-26 08:38
Trump issues tough words, the Federal Reserve responds coldly—this contrast is incredible... Being caught in the middle is really tough for us.
View OriginalReply0
PumpingCroissant
· 12-26 08:33
Federal Reserve vs. Trump, this showdown has me on edge. Whoever wins will set the tone.
View OriginalReply0
DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 12-26 08:33
Ah... Trump says he wants to stimulate the economy, while the Federal Reserve immediately moves to tighten. Both sides are fighting fiercely. I just want to ask, who will ultimately win?
Trump recently provided an interesting economic outlook: by 2026, the US will enter a new growth phase, with significant improvements in employment and income. Once this news broke, the market immediately sensed the scent of liquidity expansion—fiscal stimulus combined with accelerating economic growth, likely driving funds into stocks, cryptocurrencies, and other risk assets.
It seems everything is paving the way for a bull market, but the situation is not that simple.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve signaled the opposite. The probability of a rate cut in January has fallen to just 12%. Traders understand what this means: dovish expectations have been shattered, and the Fed’s tightening tools may be more resolute than previously thought. Liquidity leaders suddenly tighten, breaking previous expectations of a loose cycle.
The current situation is somewhat delicate. On one side is the economic stimulus plan from the president, vowing to push up asset prices; on the other side is the Fed wielding hawkish measures, refusing to loosen rate cuts. These opposing forces are pulling fiercely, and every statement from officials or data report can trigger intense market volatility.
The divergence in expectations between bulls and bears has been completely torn apart. In this environment, liquidity expectations are prone to short-term fluctuations. Will Trump’s bullish narrative dominate the overall trend, or will the tightening reality of the Fed prevail? The answer may lie in the upcoming policy battles.
Major opportunities often emerge during such policy splits. Increased volatility means higher risks, but also continuous opportunities for selection. What do you think will be the outcome of this showdown? Will it evolve into a bull market or a volatile sideways trend?