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#Gate广场四月发帖挑战 Non-farm payrolls unexpectedly exceeded expectations, blowing up rate cut expectations, while digital currencies surged against the trend: What is the market trading?
Opening battle: How divided is the market today?
On the morning of April 6, global capital markets staged a "rollercoaster" performance. On one side, traditional assets were under collective pressure: spot gold fell 0.88% to $4,631, losing the $4,610 level; U.S. stock index futures all declined, with Dow futures down 0.38%, S&P -0.35%, Nasdaq -0.37%; silver dropped 1% to $72.
On the other side, risk assets surged violently: WTI crude oil futures jumped over 3%, breaking $113 per barrel; Bitcoin rose to $70,191, up 4.79% in 24 hours; Ethereum broke $2,157, up 4.42%.
In the same market, two completely different narratives are unfolding. What are investors actually trading? Behind this split, there are three key logical threads.
First thread: How did non-farm data blow up rate cut expectations?
The U.S. March non-farm payrolls released on April 3 was the starting point of today’s market volatility. The report showed that U.S. non-farm employment increased by 178k in March, far exceeding the market expectation of 140k. Meanwhile, January’s data was revised upward from 126k to a higher level. After the data was released, traders largely dismissed the remaining Fed rate cut expectations for this year. The logical chain is clear: strong employment → persistent wage stickiness → difficulty in lowering inflation → Fed not needing to rush to cut rates → the dollar and U.S. Treasury yields rise → non-interest assets like gold come under pressure. This explains why gold quickly broke below $1,640 in the morning and continued to lose ground below $1,610. But there’s a detail worth noting: although the non-farm data was strong, the market has not fully priced in a "no rate cut" scenario. Some traders are still betting that April’s CPI data may cool down, leaving a small window for rate cuts at the June meeting. This means that the gold correction is more likely a technical adjustment rather than a trend reversal. If geopolitical conflicts escalate, gold could rebound above $1,700.
Second thread: How does the Middle East powder keg ignite oil prices?
If non-farm data is the "white card," then the Middle East situation is the biggest "black card" today.
Immediate catalyst: Trump again threatened Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz. This seemingly verbal threat actually touches the global oil supply lifeline. What is the Strait of Hormuz? About 20% of global oil trade passes through this strait, with a daily flow of about 17 million barrels. If closed, it would mean a sudden disappearance of 17% of global oil supply.
Deeper conflict: While geopolitical tensions escalate, OPEC+’s eight oil-producing countries (Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria, Oman) held a meeting on April 5, deciding to increase oil production by 206k barrels per day starting in May. How significant is 206k barrels? It’s about 0.2% of the global daily consumption. In the face of the risk of the Strait of Hormuz closing, this increase is interpreted by the market as a "symbolic" move, unlikely to ease concerns about actual supply disruptions.
As a result, we see:
• WTI crude oil surged early in the morning, exceeding 3%
• Brent crude oil moved higher in tandem
• The market began trading "supply disruption premiums"
What’s next?
Crude oil is currently in a tug-of-war between $113 and $120. If the situation in the Strait of Hormuz escalates significantly (e.g., oil tankers attacked, shipping lanes blocked), prices could break above $120; if tensions ease, prices could fall back to the $105-110 range. Key watch points: Iran’s response within the next 48 hours and the movements of the U.S. Fifth Fleet.
Third thread: Why are digital currencies moving independently?
Today’s most interesting phenomenon is that digital currencies, under pressure from traditional risk assets, have shown a large independent rally. Bitcoin broke $70k, and Ethereum rose over 4%. This performance cannot be simply explained by "rising risk appetite." Let’s break down three layers of drivers:
First layer: Technical breakthrough
After oscillating in the $66,000-$68,000 range for a week, Bitcoin finally broke upward today. Such a breakout is often accompanied by short covering and trend-following buying, creating positive feedback.
Second layer: Independent capital narrative
The crypto market is forming an independent narrative logic separate from traditional markets:
• AI Agent concept explosion: Several crypto projects announced integration of AI agent functions, attracting tech capital inflows
• Institutional allocation demand: Some hedge funds are starting to treat Bitcoin as "digital gold" to hedge fiat currency devaluation risks
• Ethereum ecosystem revival: Layer 2 transaction volumes hit new highs, boosting ETH demand
Third layer: Sentiment reversal
Last week, the crypto market Fear & Greed Index hovered at low levels, and retail investor sentiment was subdued. Today’s surge triggered short covering, creating a "short squeeze" rally. But beware: if the Fed maintains high interest rates due to sticky inflation, tightening global liquidity will ultimately cap the valuation of digital currencies.
Next phase outlook: Bitcoin breaking $70k faces the next resistance at $75k. If it can break through effectively, upside potential opens; if it stalls, it may continue to oscillate between $65,000 and $70k.
Allocation strategy: Oil & Gold & Crypto & Stocks
Based on the above analysis, here are the next phase allocation suggestions:
Short-term (1-2 weeks): Reduce leverage, mainly observe
• U.S. stocks: Delayed rate cut expectations pressure valuations, watch April CPI data
• U.S. Treasuries: 10-year yields remain high at 4.5%-4.7%
• Gold: Pullbacks are buying opportunities, target $1,700
• Crude oil: Tug-of-war between $113-$120, depending on Middle East situation
• Digital currencies: Test of the $70k level, break above to $75k, or pull back if resisted
Mid-term (1-3 months): Focus on two major variables
• Whether the Middle East situation escalates — determines upside for oil and gold
• Whether U.S. inflation cools — determines Fed’s rate cut path and global liquidity
Priority allocation: Oil & Gold & Crypto & Stocks
This order reflects current market risk appetite: from geopolitical safe havens (oil, gold) to risk assets (crypto, stocks), capital favors the former.
The market split is essentially a game of investors under multiple uncertainties. Non-farm payrolls represent "known strength," Middle East tensions represent "unknown risks," and digital currencies represent "independent narratives." The interplay of these factors creates today’s market. The only advice for ordinary investors is: in this high-volatility environment, don’t try to predict every fluctuation, but stick to your allocation discipline. If you believe geopolitical conflicts will escalate, hold oil and gold; if you believe in AI and crypto long-term narratives, dollar-cost average into Bitcoin and Ethereum; if you believe the U.S. economy will softly land, hold U.S. stock index funds. The real risk isn’t volatility itself, but losing judgment amid the fluctuations.