@enigmaeye_ I’m glad I found confirmation of my own thoughts in this:
"That is why I keep saying overtrading is not just a portfolio problem. It is an identity problem. You either train yourself to be a conviction investor. Or you train yourself to be a dopamine trader."
Thank you!
Whoever builds crypto’s version of Medallion Fund first will probably make an obscene amount of money.
What did this fund actually do?
Its founders essentially broke the traditional understanding of investing. They abandoned conventional asset evaluation frameworks and fully transitioned to complex mathematical models, analyzing massive amounts of data to uncover repeatable patterns.
The result?
Medallion reportedly delivered around +60% annual returns for decades!
Now imagine applying the same model to crypto.
This market is fundamentally driven by human reflexivity and behavioral game theory. Whoever manages to unify all of that into one system before everyone else will be able to consistently outperform the crowd.
This trader (0x6c85...84f6) has opened only one position — and it shows he’s extremely bullish on $ETH.
He opened a 20x leveraged long at $2,265 on 40k $ETH, and is currently sitting on a $1.7M profit.
And in just 30 days, he’s up more than $4,000,000.
Smart trader… or just an insider who knows something?
I still think we could see a short-term $BTC pump toward the $84,000–$85,000 range. For market makers, it’s a very attractive zone to grab liquidity.
However, from a broader perspective, nothing has really changed. Bitcoin still looks structurally weak, and there is a high probability that we are heading into a fairly long period of cyclical bottom formation.
Is history repeating itself on the $BTC chart?
Right now, it definitely looks that way. The 2018 correction, the 2022 correction... and now the 2026 correction?
Honestly, these similarities on the chart almost look a little mystical.
Despite a 3-month rally from the local bottom, $BTC still shows structural weakness, suggesting that a true bull trend has not yet formed.
It’s so obvious that it raises the possibility of price manipulation and quick upside wicks. We’ll see.
Depends on one variable: your ability to compound.
If you can reliably turn capital into higher returns, $2M is the obvious choice — it’s optionality, scale, and asymmetric upside.
If you can’t, then $4K/week is essentially a risk-free income stream (~$208K/year), which most people would fail to outperform consistently anyway.
So the real question isn’t the money — it’s: are you a capital allocator or a salary collector?
At the same time, we’re seeing a significant outflow of traders across all networks. It’s funny to watch how these two charts relate to each other, lmao. But that doesn’t mean we won’t see a sharp increase in on chain volume again.
What we’re seeing now is just a typical cleansing phase that happens in every cycle. Volume will come back, because people will never stop wanting to turn 100 dollars into 10,000, and onchain is the best place for that.
Meanwhile, history is being made right before our eyes, yet most people don’t even notice it. The market capitalization of RWA on the blockchain has reached a new all time high of 22.8 billion dollars. The financial world is about to change beyond recognition in the very near future.
The larger real world tokenized assets become, the more capital can potentially flow into crypto. And trust me, you are not ready for these multipliers. Any bull market you have seen before may look like a toy compared to what’s coming.
Meanwhile, history is being made right before our eyes, yet most people don’t even notice it. The market capitalization of RWA on the blockchain has reached a new all time high of 22.8 billion dollars. The financial world is about to change beyond recognition in the very near future.
The larger real world tokenized assets become, the more capital can potentially flow into crypto. And trust me, you are not ready for these multipliers. Any bull market you have seen before may look like a toy compared to what’s coming.
@Route2FI Same thing. The more you study this space, the more you realize how vast and diverse it is and that it’s literally our future. How can you stay on the sidelines when historic changes in finance and the economy are happening right before our eyes? The answer is obvious.
@WatcherGuru Imagine calling Bitcoin a shitcoin while it outperforms everything you’ve believed in for a decade.
Peter Schiff calling Bitcoin a shitcoin isn’t new — it’s his business model. He sells gold, not Bitcoin. Conflict keeps him relevant, Bitcoin keeps proving him wrong
@WatcherGuru Macro says instability, institutions say adoption, politicians say everything is great and crypto just quietly positions itself as the escape hatch. The narrative is writing itself.
@Cointelegraph From “nobody needs this” jokes and empty noise… to a globally recognized asset that will only keep growing over time. Yes, we’ve already won, but the work is still not finished.
They’ll come back when the new cycle begins. The whole point lies in what drives human motivation. Cryptocurrency has been and still is the most asymmetric opportunity for the average person.
As the middle class effectively starts to disappear, more and more people will turn to high volatility games. And crypto is their doorway to a new life and possibly their only shot. Nothing really compares to it, at least until this space becomes too efficient.The nature of this space is cyclical, so traders will come back.
@chainshinobi I think we could very well see $10,000. Especially if $ETH takes the lead in the new meta. That’s realistic. Staking, restaking… all these large-scale innovations could make it absurdly big.