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$BTC Recently, the global financial markets are embroiled in an invisible clash. The Supreme Court's ruling on Trump's tariff policy legality is about to be announced within 48 hours. This is not just a simple legal procedure—it involves a $130 billion capital game. If the ruling revokes the policy, it could trigger the largest tax refund wave in history, and market expectations have already been fully priced in.
The market has already provided an answer. The Nasdaq index has fallen by 1%, the semiconductor sector has plunged by 1.1%, and consumer stocks are under pressure across the board. The ultimate question behind this is quite piercing: can the president bypass Congress and unilaterally declare a "national emergency" to control the global trade landscape? The answer will determine the market direction in the coming quarters.
But tariff disputes are just the tip of the iceberg. Deeper concerns have long been lurking within economic data—
First, the disconnect on the consumer side is more severe than imagined. On the surface, GDP growth looks decent, but in reality, it is supported by the top 10% high-income groups, while middle-class purchasing power has already been declining. Looking at the tech sector, capital has flooded into AI over the past two years, but the real profit dilemma has yet to be solved, and bubble risks could burst at any time. The most frightening ghost is inflation—some analysis agencies warn that by 2026, we may face a dual attack of out-of-control inflation and a stock market crash.
Against this backdrop, more and more people's choices are becoming clear. You see Iranian citizens using Bitcoin to counter currency devaluation, and Wall Street institutional investors initiating the "tokenization" of trillions of assets. These are not coincidences. As the certainty of traditional finance gradually erodes, controlling asset sovereignty, enabling cross-border liquidity, and avoiding single-currency risks have become a global consensus.
History often makes choices at a crossroads. On one side are the legal rulings and market shocks of the old system; on the other side is the quiet reconstruction of a new asset paradigm. At this critical moment, Bitcoin is no longer just a speculative asset but has become the most direct hedging tool. Regardless of the verdict, market segmentation has already begun—those who can't keep up will be eliminated, while the foresightful are already making their moves.