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#特朗普数字资产政策新方向 The degree of acceptance of $BTC varies greatly across different markets, and this divergence is shaping completely different investment narratives.
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin’s bottom is quietly rising—the support at 78,000 has evolved into a new low at 82,000, and this stepwise upward structure is sending a signal that cannot be ignored. The current key support has moved up to the 85,000 area, and at this pace, a rebound to 96,000 during the Fed’s interest rate decision window is not impossible, though I wouldn't bet on it. At this stage, it looks more like a technical correction rather than a trend reversal, so those calling for a 102,000 target are a bit much for me. If it does pull back to around 85,000, that would actually be a good short-term buying opportunity.
Along with the strengthening market, a series of positive signals have emerged. The US government spending plan, expectations of Fed rate cuts combined with a halt to quantitative tightening, the Bank of Japan finally raising rates... each of these factors is being repeatedly digested by the market. What’s even more interesting is that in BlackRock’s core filing to the SEC, there’s this line: Short-term price fluctuations do not change long-term holding strategies.
The real turning point happened yesterday (December 2). The world’s second-largest asset manager, Vanguard Group—the conservative player that used to scoff at cryptocurrencies—announced it would open up Bitcoin and Ethereum purchasing channels to investors. This is the true face of the capital market: previous refusals were because the price wasn’t yet in their psychological range and because they needed time for retail investors to hand over their chips. Now that prices have dropped, if they don’t act, their clients will be snatched away by BlackRock.
Meanwhile, some US banks have already started advising clients to allocate 1% to 10% of their portfolios to digital assets.
In stark contrast, domestic public opinion is still filled with various bearish voices.
In recent days, the “going to zero” theory is once again trending.
Rumors about quantum computers posing threats, wallets being hacked, Bitcoin being centralized, and so on are popping up one after another.
All I can say is, let time prove everything.