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#美联储降息 Why does the price of coins still fall after the Fed cuts interest rates? What's really going on with this market?
Last night, the Federal Reserve announced a 25 basis point rate cut. I thought this would trigger a rally, but instead, the market turned a "positive news" into a "negative surprise."
The price dropped from 94,000 to around 90,000 at an incredible speed. This move caused many traders' sentiments to fall from heaven to hell — it’s really uncomfortable.
**Where's the problem? Honestly, the market has little expectation left for rate cuts.**
The Fed’s pace of rate cuts is painfully slow — at most one cut in 2026 and 2027. For a market used to "liquidity infusion," this doesn't stimulate much. Internally, there's also fierce debate; Powell keeps emphasizing the importance of employment data in decision-making. Goldman Sachs even said that the era of "preemptive rate cuts" is over. Unless the labor market deteriorates significantly, there's no chance.
**The fundamental issue is a lack of money.**
Without continuous inflows of new funds, retail traders have no enthusiasm, and major players are on the sidelines. Japan is raising interest rates, and with year-end Christmas fund repatriation, market liquidity is tightening. Under these conditions, there are no new positive catalysts, so the market is likely to weaken. If negative news suddenly emerges, breaking 80,000 in $BTC wouldn't be impossible.
The voting on this rate cut was chaotic — the dot plot was confusing, and even Powell’s remarks failed to provide reassurance. Market sentiment dominates everything; short-term movements are really unpredictable, though the long-term outlook still leans bullish.
The key is to see which upcoming data can ignite market sentiment and how to position oneself optimally to catch the best opportunities.
A typical case where good news turns into bad news, the Fed’s move is simply brilliant
Lack of liquidity is the real culprit, no money to enter the market, what’s the point of talking about rises
Powell’s recent remarks are indeed unimpressive, the market simply doesn’t buy it
Honestly, it feels like I can’t even protect 80,000, this wave is too tough
The pace of rate cuts is off, the market has long lost expectations for this
Major players are waiting and retail investors are selling at a loss, a classic game of brinkmanship
Year-end capital repatriation is a ticking time bomb, anyone trying to bottom fish here is losing their mind
Turning good news into bad news is a normal operation now, I'm exhausted.
Is this all from 9.4 to 90,000? Damn, I've already gotten used to it.
Liquidity is the key, everything else is useless.
Year-end Christmas cash-in, the big players probably already ran away.
Breaking below 80,000 doesn't surprise me; anyway, I'll have to cut losses again.
In the short term, it's purely a sentiment-driven market—who can predict this crazy trend?
Staring at Powell's words every day, but he never really intends to loosen policy. No wonder the market drops.
When it comes to liquidity shortages, retail investors are the hardest hit. The big players have already exited.
Instead of waiting for data, better to wait for the December liquidity easing.
80,000 isn't a dream; anyway, I've become numb to it.
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Same old story, the era of liquidity easing is over; now it's all about playing on emotions.
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From 9.4 to 90,000 at this speed—retail investors are being happily harvested.
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Lacking money, brother? The Christmas fund return wave is too fierce.
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Breaking 80,000 is really not a dream, haha—heard that too many times.
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Powell keeps talking tough about employment, but the market simply doesn’t buy it.
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The main players are probably just watching the show now; no one dares to go first.
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What a mess the dot plot is—these people haven't even figured it out themselves.
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Long-term bullish with short-term daddy mentality; let's wait until the long-term to see.
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Position locking? Entering now, isn't that just becoming a bag-holder?
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The dot matrix chart is so chaotic; Powell really has no convincing point this time, no wonder the coin price directly dropped.
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Lack of liquidity is the root cause, not the rate cut; these people will never understand.
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From 9.4 to 90,000, this inverse operation is brilliant; the whales will start to harvest retail investors' stop-loss orders.
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Long-term bullish? Wake up, interest rate cuts won't happen until 2026, are you waiting for that?
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The Christmas fund turnaround is a good perspective, but it’s better to look at on-chain chip distribution, which will determine the next step.
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Goldman Sachs said the preemptive rate cut is over; the market has already responded, retail investors are just a beat slow.