Bullish indeed. Ondo pushing into the $64T equities market is huge — they’re moving from simple tokenized assets to full market infrastructure. With USDY expanding to Sei, the ecosystem fit is clear: Ondo builds the products, Sei handles the settlement speed.
This is exactly how the next wave of tokenized markets starts taking shape.
@TedPillows Coinbase Bitcoin Premium hitting its lowest in Q4 shows U.S. buyers stepping back. Big players look like they’re exiting, which explains the weaker spot demand and cooling momentum.
A neutral Fed is actually bullish for crypto.
When the Federal Reserve steps back and lets the private sector lead innovation, it removes a huge layer of regulatory uncertainty. That clarity is exactly what the industry needs to scale.
A risk-managed framework + hands-off stance =
✔️ More innovation
✔️ More institutional participation
✔️ A smoother path for digital asset growth
Crypto thrives when regulators focus on safety — not control.
A drop toward $60K isn’t impossible if liquidity keeps thinning and institutions stay on the sidelines, but it would take a real capitulation event to get there. What matters more is the structure — we’re still in a broader bull cycle, even if the mid-cycle drawdown gets deeper. If Coinbase’s institutional desk is flagging caution, it means big money is waiting for clarity, not abandoning crypto. Volatility now, opportunity later.
Exactly. A drop to $93K feels dramatic in the moment, but it’s well within normal bull-market correction territory. We’ve seen far deeper retracements in previous cycles and the long-term fundamentals haven’t changed one bit. Volatility is the admission price for outsized upside. Stay consistent, keep your DCA pace, and let the bigger structure play out.
@AshCrypto YTD turning negative doesn’t automatically cancel a bull market. Cycles have deep mid-trend resets, and this one is clearly in that phase. Structure > short-term returns. A temporary drawdown doesn’t negate the broader trend.
Exactly. Losing $94K shifts the market into support-seeking mode, and the CME gap is the obvious magnet. Volatility staying elevated makes sense with all the macro data dropping this week and the Fed likely stepping in to calm things if needed. After last week’s brutal candle, nobody should expect a straight V-reversal — bottoms take time to form. The broader cycle structure is still intact.
@MerlijnTrader Facts. Equities are grinding higher while BTC is getting discounted deeper every week. A 26% pullback in the strongest asset of the cycle doesn’t scream weakness — it screams opportunity. Smart money always steps in when everything looks out of sync. They’ll catch on soon enough.
@cryptorover Facts. Equities are grinding higher while BTC is getting discounted deeper every week. A 26% pullback in the strongest asset of the cycle doesn’t scream weakness — it screams opportunity. Smart money always steps in when everything looks out of sync. They’ll catch on soon enough.
Exactly. When you’ve got macro improving, sentiment stabilizing, and price already oversold—but the sell-side flow accelerates—that’s not retail panic. That’s structured unloading. Someone is repositioning with intent. Either big players are derisking ahead of a catalyst we haven’t seen yet, or they’re forcing liquidity lower to accumulate cheaper. Either way, this isn’t random flow. Something’s brewing beneath the surface.
@CryptoMichNL Makes sense. If we’re heading for that CME gap at ~$91.6K, then another sweep of the lows fits perfectly. Market still hunting liquidity before any real reversal.
Massive buy from Saylor for sure — but yeah, the execution above $100K isn’t ideal. What matters now is whether this was a one-off or if he continues stacking at this pace. If he keeps buying aggressively, it adds a strong demand floor. If not, the market will treat it as just another headline pump. Let’s see how consistent he is over the next few weeks.
Big players rotating out of NVIDIA definitely raises eyebrows — Thiel, SoftBank, even Burry taking a short. It doesn’t necessarily mean the AI bubble has fully popped, but it does show that smart money is getting more cautious. We might be shifting from the hype phase into a more mature, selective AI market. Worth keeping a close eye on.
Fear & Greed Index hit 10—the lowest since Feb/FTX crash. 👀
It’s interesting, but mostly just a snapshot. Markets can stay in extreme fear or greed for months.
For real edge, I track on-chain flows, whale activity, funding rates & social sentiment. Crypto moves fast—lagging metrics aren’t enough.
Anyone else using more actionable sentiment signals? 🔍
That’s a major signal — when fear spikes to levels last seen in the 2022 bear market, it usually means capitulation is peaking.
Extreme fear rarely shows up at the start of a downtrend… it usually appears near the end, when weak hands are shaken out and smart money starts accumulating.
@cryptorover That’s basically a coin-flip — the market isn’t convinced either way.
A rate cut would boost risk assets, but even holding steady isn’t bearish as long as inflation trends keep improving.
In short: uncertainty is high, but no clear bearish signal yet.
That’s a massive wipeout, but it also shows how extreme the capitulation has been. When the market sheds over $600B in such a short span, it usually means we’re closer to the end of the fear phase than the beginning. Historically, these deep flushes often set the stage for strong rebounds once liquidity stabilizes.
Absolutely — holding the 2025 Yearly Open after a weekly close above it is a strong sign of potential bottom formation.
This level acts as a major higher-timeframe pivot. If BTC continues to defend it:
•It confirms a successful liquidity sweep,
•Sellers lose momentum,
•And buyers finally get a clean level to build a bounce from.
It’s not guaranteed, but historically Bitcoin respects yearly opens.
Hold the level → bounce likely. Lose it → deeper downside unlocks.