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 Behavior: Reports from on-chain analytics firms like Glassnode show that despite sharp price volatility, the overall supply of Bitcoin held by long-term holders (addresses holding for over 155 days) has not significantly decreased recently, and some accumulation occurs at lower price points. This is often seen as a sign of “diamond hands” conviction and a potential indicator that the market is approaching a bottom.
Exchange Flows and Balances: Continuous outflows of Bitcoin from centralized exchanges may suggest investors prefer transferring assets into private wallets for long-term custody rather than preparing to sell at any moment. A sustained decline in exchange balances can help ease selling pressure.
Stablecoin Reserves: Changes in the total market cap of major stablecoins (like USDT, USDC) and their on-exchange holdings can be viewed as a “ammunition depot” of off-exchange waiting funds. If stablecoin market cap stops shrinking or begins to grow, and exchange stablecoin balances increase, it may indicate a buildup of potential buying power.
Futures Market Liquidations and Funding Rates: Extreme declines often coincide with concentrated liquidations of leveraged long positions in futures markets. After large-scale liquidations, short-term selling pressure diminishes. Meanwhile, perpetual contract funding rates remaining negative or near zero suggest that speculative long frenzy has largely subsided.
These on-chain signals are not absolute timing tools for the bottom, but collectively they depict a scene where “panic selling has occurred, some steadfast investors are beginning to absorb, but overall sentiment remains at a freezing point.” This aligns with the description by Yili Hua and others of a “very cheap but dare not buy” state, with data echoing each other.
An old saying in finance goes: “Markets are born in despair.” Yili Hua’s margin call and bullish calls, Tom Lee’s insistence on optimism amid market crashes, along with pervasive social media pessimism, sarcasm, and skepticism, vividly illustrate the extreme emotional state of the market.
Significance of Sentiment Indicators: Market sentiment indicators like the Fear & Greed Index, when they remain in the “extreme fear” zone for extended periods, often signal that most negative news has been priced in. At this point, any marginal improvement could trigger a significant rebound. Current market sentiment undoubtedly fits this pattern.
The Complexity of “Contrarian” Signals: However, sentiment bottoming does not mean prices will immediately and permanently reverse. Markets can remain in deep pessimism for a long time, even experiencing a more brutal “sell everything” final dip. Sentiment recovery requires catalysts such as clear inflation turning points, easing rate hike expectations, new positive narratives in crypto, or regulatory clarity.
The Trap and True Meaning of “Best Buying Opportunity”: For leveraged traders, attempting to “bottom fish” during extreme volatility and uncertain trends can lead to forced exits due to short-term fluctuations. Yili Hua’s own situation serves as a warning. The so-called “best buying opportunity” varies greatly depending on the investor’s capital type, investment horizon, and risk tolerance. For long-term dollar-cost averaging investors, the current zone is attractive; for short-term traders, it may still be a risky zone.
History shows that genuine market bottoms are often built amid silence, even mockery. The current pervasive despair and scattered “counter-trend” calls may be the faint glimmer of light at the end of the dark tunnel—but crossing it requires patience, caution, and deep faith in value. Markets never simply repeat history, but human nature and cyclical rhythms are always similar.