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#ETF与衍生品 After reading Cathie Wood's argument, it actually reflects the institutional hierarchy of understanding regarding crypto assets—BTC as the entry point, ETH as infrastructure, and SOL focused on applications. This logical framework is quite worth pondering.
During the flash crash on 1011, I noticed a detail: BTC, with the most liquidity, surprisingly became the "bagholder," and after being hammered down, it caused the entire ecosystem to collapse. This tells us that during extreme volatility, the selling pressure from leading assets propagates step by step. The key variable now lies in traditional financial institutions' ETF deployment—once giants like Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo officially enter, the market structure will undergo a qualitative change.
The insight for copy-trading strategies is: during this window before ETFs are implemented, institutional deployment expectations will significantly influence the strength of BTC's price movement, and other tokens may present excess return opportunities. If you want to follow this approach, focus on those traders who can precisely time institutional capital movements—they often lead the market by half a beat. For partial positions, consider small, exploratory follow trades with one or two accounts highly sensitive to this, and for more aggressive risk preferences, increase the proportion but set stop-losses properly—after all, policy expectations can reverse quickly.
The market may have already bottomed out, but a bottom doesn't mean takeoff; we still need confirmation from real institutional capital.