I recently heard an interesting point of view. A senior trading strategist mentioned on a podcast that although Bitcoin has fallen nearly 30% from its high of $125,100 in early October, and many people are bearish, this does not tell the full story. His logic is straightforward—short-term price fluctuations are just that, no one can predict exactly what will happen next. But from a longer-term perspective, the fundamentals are actually quite stable.
He especially emphasized one point: Bitcoin investors need to learn to think with data and rationality, and not be scared by short-term rises and falls. Additionally, he mentioned that the US is showing unprecedented support for Bitcoin, and traditional financial systems are actively catching up with this trend. This reflects a structural change in the entire market, not just simple price volatility.
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SelfSovereignSteve
· 11h ago
A 30% decline is indeed steep, but every time there's a crash, people shout about the end of the world. So what happened? Check the fundamentals yourself through the data, don't just listen to empty talk.
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Really, short-term charts are just noise. Long-term holders have long been used to this. The shift in the US attitude is the real big deal.
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It's that same rational investment rhetoric again, speaking easily. When it really drops by half, isn't everyone panicking and selling?
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Institutional entry is real, and this wave is different from before. The recognition from traditional finance has indeed increased.
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Don't be scared. That's right, but the problem is most people simply can't do that.
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The judgment of structural change is still reliable; it's not something that can be explained by simple hype.
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I just want to ask, if the fundamentals are so stable, why did it still fall 30%? That doesn't make sense.
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Comments from senior strategists are just for listening; the key is how much drawdown you can withstand.
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The US support attitude has indeed shifted, and this is no small matter. Some people might not have realized it yet.
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ProofOfNothing
· 11h ago
A 30% decline and they start telling stories. Anyway, it's all about the "fundamentals are stable" narrative, and I've heard it so many times my ears are calloused.
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AirdropworkerZhang
· 11h ago
They start to pessimistic after a 30% drop. These people do this every time... Really, just look at the fundamentals, don't scare yourself by staring at the K-line every day.
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DAOdreamer
· 11h ago
A 30% decline is nothing, long-term holding is the way to go, don’t let the candlestick chart scare you to death
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This dip is just a shakeout, the real signal is when traditional finance enters the market
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Exactly, the key point is the shift in the US attitude, the price will catch up sooner or later
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Rational investing ≠ watching the market constantly, I’m just the kind of person easily scared out haha
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As long as the fundamentals are stable, that’s enough. Anyway, I don’t pay attention to short-term fluctuations. Either long-term or get out
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Every time there’s a big drop, some people are bearish, but wake up, everyone
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Traditional finance is already chasing in, so what are you worried about? This is the overall trend
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I agree with using data to speak, don’t be driven by emotions
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AlwaysMissingTops
· 11h ago
This 30% drop is really nothing to be afraid of; institutions are quietly accumulating.
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A 30% decline is nothing; the key is that traditional finance is finally starting to accept us, and this is a major event.
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Honestly, looking at the short-term price is just looking for trouble; as long as the fundamentals haven't broken, it's not over.
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The real core is the shift in US attitude; everything else is just noise.
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Once again, a bunch of people have been shaken out haha, I just love watching this scene.
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Rational data thinking is really scarce; most people just follow the herd and shout buy/sell signals.
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The current correction from 125 is very normal; true investors have long been used to this.
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Structural changes are underway; whoever sees it clearly first will make money.
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A 30% drop? The time I built my position was even worse.
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When traditional finance catches up, it means the cycle has arrived; don't get too caught up in short-term prices.
I recently heard an interesting point of view. A senior trading strategist mentioned on a podcast that although Bitcoin has fallen nearly 30% from its high of $125,100 in early October, and many people are bearish, this does not tell the full story. His logic is straightforward—short-term price fluctuations are just that, no one can predict exactly what will happen next. But from a longer-term perspective, the fundamentals are actually quite stable.
He especially emphasized one point: Bitcoin investors need to learn to think with data and rationality, and not be scared by short-term rises and falls. Additionally, he mentioned that the US is showing unprecedented support for Bitcoin, and traditional financial systems are actively catching up with this trend. This reflects a structural change in the entire market, not just simple price volatility.