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When the market crashes, fear always outweighs rationality. Behind this recent decline, there are actually some deeper factors—institutional capital adjustments and changes in global liquidity.
Over the past two days, looking at the candlestick charts can make you break out in a cold sweat. BTC has fallen from $90,000 to below $86,000, ETH has broken through $3,000, and the altcoin sector is in chaos. The square is filled with panic voices: "Stablecoins are about to be regulated!" "Global liquidity is drying up!" "This time, it's really going to crash!"
But having been in this circle for many years, I’ve seen a few real bear markets. Although this drop is frightening, its nature is actually different—this is market self-repair, not a sign of systemic risk.
**The core reasons are actually just two**
First is the action by the Bank of Japan. They raised interest rates to 0.75%, the highest in thirty years. At first glance, it doesn’t seem like a big deal, but this move has caused ripples in the global financial markets.
Over the past decade and a half, a classic arbitrage strategy has been in play: borrowing yen (with near-zero interest rates) to invest in high-yield assets like US stocks and cryptocurrencies. The interest rate differential has been highly profitable. Now that borrowing costs in yen have increased, this game can no longer continue. Institutions are pulling back funds to cover their positions, and the first to be cut are the most liquid, high-risk assets like cryptocurrencies.
History shows: after the Bank of Japan’s three previous rate hikes, Bitcoin experienced 20%-30% corrections. This time is no different.
Second is the ongoing pressure from regulatory policies. These factors combined can indeed trigger a technical market crash. But that doesn’t mean anything—corrections are healthy, and markets can’t go up in a straight line forever.
The real opportunity often hides within this kind of panic.