#美国民主党BlueVault The market has been stirring up again recently, and it seems the calm days didn't last long.



A series of events on Monday brought all the issues to the forefront—when macroeconomic signals are unpredictable and on-chain data is weak, Bitcoin's recent rally is as fragile as paper. When CPI data comes in soft, the market immediately turns bullish, followed by a classic liquidity squeeze.

Over $500 million in short positions were directly wiped out, with $BTC dropping to around $95,000 at one point—this was the most intense short squeeze since October.

But there's a detail that's easy to overlook: this rally isn't primarily driven by the spot market; fundamentally, it's still the derivatives market pushing the momentum. Genuine corporate buyers and long-term institutional investors have hardly participated, while some new large holders are caught in losses—this kind of movement we've seen many times in previous squeeze markets. Frankly, this upward trend isn't stable.

There are several key points to watch now. On January 14, the U.S. Supreme Court's tariff ruling could shake up the dollar and risk assets. Meanwhile, the regulatory environment for cryptocurrencies in the U.S. (Genius Act, Clarity Act) is gradually leaning towards being more friendly to institutions, and this development shouldn't be overlooked.

My assessment: Bitcoin's short-term rally is under a stress test. ETF capital inflows can provide support, but the problem is that speculative leverage still dominates. The next critical variable is how volatility will evolve.

Don't follow the herd, don't bet on directions—risk management is always more valuable than blind optimism. $BTC $ETH
BTC3.25%
ETH4.99%
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MindsetExpandervip
· 8h ago
It's the derivatives dancing again, what about spot buyers? Truly institutional players have already stepped aside.
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SneakyFlashloanvip
· 8h ago
Derivatives are leading the trend, while spot markets haven't kept up. This rise is indeed superficial. Wait, the new retail investors are still getting caught and losing money by taking on more positions? Typical manipulator tricks. If CPI softens a bit, the market turns bullish. The market is a bit too sensitive. Bitcoin's stability until the January 14th ruling remains to be seen; otherwise, it's just gambling. Leverage is still so high; sooner or later, there will be another bloodbath. Don't ask me how I know.
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LightningPacketLossvip
· 8h ago
Derivatives are playing tricks again. I really don't believe the price increase without institutional follow-up. It's the same old story: champagne popping when short positions are squeezed, then chaos when it crashes again. I've seen it too many times. This time, with no spot buyers stepping in, it will have to be made up sooner or later. Let's wait and see how the US side acts on January 14th. Risk control is the ironclad truth.
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ProposalManiacvip
· 8h ago
The surge driven by derivatives looks like hardly anyone really wants to buy. There's a problem with the mechanism design—newcomers and arbitrageurs are consuming each other. Where are the genuine participants? This is no different from the several false breakouts in history.
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