#以太坊大户持仓变化 🔥Policy escalation intensifies, the Federal Reserve faces a crossroads
As soon as Trump took office, he started exerting pressure: "Cut interest rates by 1% immediately!" Powell's response was "Policy independence is unshakable." The conflicting stances of these two key figures have directly stirred the entire financial market. You need to understand the real dilemma behind this: if Powell cuts rates, there's concern about inflation rebounding; if he insists on not cutting, he will face political pressure and a debt crisis. This is not just a simple economic issue but a battle of power versus reality.
The scale of US debt has risen to $38 trillion, and more alarmingly—within just three months, it increased by $1 trillion, requiring $2 million in interest payments every minute. This money-burning speed surpasses even defense spending. How to resolve this? There are only two paths: either significantly raise taxes (which is politically almost impossible) or flood the market with liquidity by printing money. The market has already seen through all this, so it has started pricing in expectations—CME data shows the probability of a rate cut in March is rising, gold has stabilized at the $4,300 level, and Bitcoin has even broken through the $93,000 mark. Behind this surge in $BTC, it's the market's expectation of loose liquidity.
But here’s a crucial point: by 2025, 1.66 million people have experienced margin calls, with losses totaling 19.3 billion. High leverage is always a double-edged sword; under optimistic sentiment, it’s easier to cut your own fingers. The real strategy should be: first, closely monitor every Federal Reserve decision and official speech—don't guess tops and bottoms based on feelings; second, allocate inflation-hedging assets, such as $BTC and gold ETFs, as safe-haven tools; third, keep leverage positions within your risk tolerance—greed is the biggest risk.
The core issues boil down to three points: Will Powell concede under Trump’s pressure? Will the flood of liquidity ultimately flow into Bitcoin or gold? Will crypto participants profit from this round or get cut? Feel free to share your thoughts and position plans in the comments.
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SchrödingersNode
· 19h ago
Powell is definitely going to make concessions this time; Trump isn't joking around.
I believe 1.66 million people getting liquidated, and this round will also wipe out a batch of retail investors.
Where is the bottom for Bitcoin at 93,000? At this pace, it will continue to surge in March.
Leverage is just a trap; I've quit it long ago.
Only when liquidity flows in is gold the king; don't put all your bets on BTC.
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SocialAnxietyStaker
· 01-09 13:14
Powell still has to compromise; no one can withstand the political pressure.
The ones who always make money are those who see the right direction; the ones losing money are definitely us retail investors.
1.66 million people got liquidated. I'm wondering if I will be next.
View OriginalReply0
potentially_notable
· 01-09 12:37
If Powell really dares to cut interest rates, what if inflation rises again? We're doomed.
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GasFeeSurvivor
· 01-09 10:15
1.66 million liquidations, I bet a bunch will still die this round. Leverage is really poison.
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SmartMoneyWallet
· 01-07 01:26
$38 trillion in US debt increased by $1 trillion in three months, this data is really outrageous... $2 million in interest per minute, easing has become a certainty, the only question is when and how much.
Powell actually surrendered a long time ago, who believes in the narrative of political independence? On-chain data has long been pricing in rate cut expectations.
166,000 people liquidated with $19.3 billion, I ask how many retail investors still need to be sacrificed to be satisfied? This wave of market is a feast for big funds accumulating positions.
It's not surprising that BTC broke $93,000; what really matters is the distribution of chips. The whales have long been hoarding, now it's just waiting for liquidity to loosen.
Leverage players should really look at on-chain data, don’t just focus on candlestick charts... capital flow is the key.
View OriginalReply0
TokenDustCollector
· 01-07 01:21
It's another story of Powell having to compromise; in the end, it's still about printing money.
View OriginalReply0
RatioHunter
· 01-07 01:18
It's the same story again. Waiting for interest rate cuts until everything turns green. Instead of guessing Powell's intentions, it's better to watch the market trends.
View OriginalReply0
TokenSherpa
· 01-07 01:17
nah look, if you examine the fed's historical voting patterns on rate decisions, powell's caught between a rock and a hard place here... the governance precedent is actually fascinating when you break it down. fundamentally speaking, the 38 trillion debt trajectory? that's not sustainable under current tokenomics framework of deficit spending.
Reply0
AirdropDreamer
· 01-07 01:03
Powell, this guy is really tough, always a trap on both sides
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Here we go again, always talking about easing, I just ask if there's profit to be made
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1.66 million liquidated? I just want to know where that 19.3 billion went
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Leverage traders really deserve it, greed knows no bounds
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Expectations of rate cuts are already priced in, is there still room to rise?
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The debt black hole is getting bigger, can the crypto circle eat some of this wave?
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Bitcoin hitting 93,000 is just so happy, comparing it to gold is the real endgame
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When political pressure is high, printing money is inevitable, nothing new
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Tracking the Fed's decision is not as fast as watching the market reaction
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38 trillion? That number needs to be taken with a grain of salt
View OriginalReply0
LongTermDreamer
· 01-07 01:02
1.66 million liquidations only amount to 19.3 billion? On average, each person has just over 110,000. With such a small amount of money, they still have the nerve to leverage. When we rise in three years, we'll be laughing.
#以太坊大户持仓变化 🔥Policy escalation intensifies, the Federal Reserve faces a crossroads
As soon as Trump took office, he started exerting pressure: "Cut interest rates by 1% immediately!" Powell's response was "Policy independence is unshakable." The conflicting stances of these two key figures have directly stirred the entire financial market. You need to understand the real dilemma behind this: if Powell cuts rates, there's concern about inflation rebounding; if he insists on not cutting, he will face political pressure and a debt crisis. This is not just a simple economic issue but a battle of power versus reality.
The scale of US debt has risen to $38 trillion, and more alarmingly—within just three months, it increased by $1 trillion, requiring $2 million in interest payments every minute. This money-burning speed surpasses even defense spending. How to resolve this? There are only two paths: either significantly raise taxes (which is politically almost impossible) or flood the market with liquidity by printing money. The market has already seen through all this, so it has started pricing in expectations—CME data shows the probability of a rate cut in March is rising, gold has stabilized at the $4,300 level, and Bitcoin has even broken through the $93,000 mark. Behind this surge in $BTC, it's the market's expectation of loose liquidity.
But here’s a crucial point: by 2025, 1.66 million people have experienced margin calls, with losses totaling 19.3 billion. High leverage is always a double-edged sword; under optimistic sentiment, it’s easier to cut your own fingers. The real strategy should be: first, closely monitor every Federal Reserve decision and official speech—don't guess tops and bottoms based on feelings; second, allocate inflation-hedging assets, such as $BTC and gold ETFs, as safe-haven tools; third, keep leverage positions within your risk tolerance—greed is the biggest risk.
The core issues boil down to three points: Will Powell concede under Trump’s pressure? Will the flood of liquidity ultimately flow into Bitcoin or gold? Will crypto participants profit from this round or get cut? Feel free to share your thoughts and position plans in the comments.