Recently, there is a phenomenon in the market worth noting—two major institutions representing American and Asian funds, their buying rhythms have already become noticeably out of sync. This divergence, to some extent, has already determined whether BTC can continue to rise.
Looking back at the strong rally in the second quarter, it was essentially driven by capital from both sides working together. It’s important to know that Bitcoin’s market cap is now close to two trillion dollars, and the chips have long been scattered all over the place, with many old investors still holding losses. Under these circumstances, relying on one side’s funds alone cannot push the price to new highs; it requires multiple sources of capital to enter the market simultaneously.
But now the game has changed. The American funds are still fighting it out, believing that the so-called four-year cycle is outdated and continuing to add positions without hesitation; on the other hand, Asian investors are still operating according to the old cycle, taking profits at highs. The result is a tug-of-war: one side is pushing the market up while the other keeps selling pressure down. This seesaw state makes it very unlikely to hit new highs.
Let’s also analyze the real situation of U.S. capital itself. Their incremental inflows mainly rely on two channels—ETFs and large corporate investors. The net inflow of ETFs, in terms of scale and consistency, is clearly weaker than the wave earlier this year; large corporate investors have also mostly retreated, with only some leading listed tech companies still making regular investments, and new buying activity has become rare. Even more critically, the relevant indices have frozen the weight adjustments of this company, meaning that the more they buy, the harder it becomes to attract passive funds to take over, and the financing space is tightly constrained.
Putting these factors together: U.S. capital’s strength is below previous highs, Asian capital is systematically selling at highs, and the probability of BTC hitting new highs within the year is indeed low. Unless some sudden black swan event directly overturns the current volume structure, it will be very difficult to break this situation in the short term.
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WenMoon42
· 5h ago
Miya funds are out of sync, and this situation is indeed a bit tense.
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DiamondHands
· 5h ago
American and Asian capital clash, retail investors suffer, simple and brutal
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GasFeeTherapist
· 6h ago
The seesaw is done so brilliantly, pulling on one side and smashing on the other. How can it hit a new high?
American capital is losing strength, Asian capital is selling high. In plain terms, no one is really taking the plunge.
Unless a black swan crashes in, hitting a new high this year is basically nonsense.
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0xLuckbox
· 6h ago
The seesaw effect is indeed a problem; the disconnect between American and Asian capital is real.
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TeaTimeTrader
· 6h ago
The analogy of the seesaw is perfect—American capital and Asian capital are just undermining each other.
If the funds are not synchronized, don't expect new highs; this logic isn't wrong.
Another black swan saving the market? Overthinking it.
The significant decline in ETF inflows is the real key; the data is right here.
So, let's wait and see; there's no opportunity in the short term.
Old cycles are already outdated? American capital is overestimating itself.
On the Asian side, we're still the conservative camp—sell on rallies, no problem.
By observing the tactics of that company in the index freeze, you can see how deep the water really is.
Hitting a new high within the year? I think it's doubtful.
Instead of worrying about whether it can break new highs, it's better to think about how to preserve capital.
Recently, there is a phenomenon in the market worth noting—two major institutions representing American and Asian funds, their buying rhythms have already become noticeably out of sync. This divergence, to some extent, has already determined whether BTC can continue to rise.
Looking back at the strong rally in the second quarter, it was essentially driven by capital from both sides working together. It’s important to know that Bitcoin’s market cap is now close to two trillion dollars, and the chips have long been scattered all over the place, with many old investors still holding losses. Under these circumstances, relying on one side’s funds alone cannot push the price to new highs; it requires multiple sources of capital to enter the market simultaneously.
But now the game has changed. The American funds are still fighting it out, believing that the so-called four-year cycle is outdated and continuing to add positions without hesitation; on the other hand, Asian investors are still operating according to the old cycle, taking profits at highs. The result is a tug-of-war: one side is pushing the market up while the other keeps selling pressure down. This seesaw state makes it very unlikely to hit new highs.
Let’s also analyze the real situation of U.S. capital itself. Their incremental inflows mainly rely on two channels—ETFs and large corporate investors. The net inflow of ETFs, in terms of scale and consistency, is clearly weaker than the wave earlier this year; large corporate investors have also mostly retreated, with only some leading listed tech companies still making regular investments, and new buying activity has become rare. Even more critically, the relevant indices have frozen the weight adjustments of this company, meaning that the more they buy, the harder it becomes to attract passive funds to take over, and the financing space is tightly constrained.
Putting these factors together: U.S. capital’s strength is below previous highs, Asian capital is systematically selling at highs, and the probability of BTC hitting new highs within the year is indeed low. Unless some sudden black swan event directly overturns the current volume structure, it will be very difficult to break this situation in the short term.