The market has been under significant pressure these days. BTC has already dropped to around $90,300, with a 24-hour decline of approximately 2.6%; ETH appears even weaker, fluctuating around $3,120, with a decline of 4.1% over the same period.
However, the actions of institutions are still quite interesting. Morgan Stanley has submitted an application to the SEC for spot ETFs covering BTC, ETH, and SOL, indicating that traditional financial giants are still increasing their exposure to crypto assets. BlackRock has also been active recently, making large purchases of BTC and ETH. According to statistics, the net institutional inflow during this wave of volatility has already exceeded $1 billion.
Payment scenarios are also expanding. Video platform Rumble has integrated Tether wallet functionality, allowing creators to now accept BTC tips directly, further strengthening BTC’s role as a payment method in the content economy.
Policy developments are worth paying attention to. Senator Tim Scott revealed that the Senate Banking Committee is expected to hold a markup vote on the Crypto Market Structure Bill in mid-January, where BTC and ETH might be classified as commodities—this classification could have a significant impact on the overall regulatory framework.
Short-term volatility is expected to amplify. Manufacturing PMI data was released last Friday, showing continued contraction in manufacturing activity, as the market digests the potential impact on the economy and the US dollar exchange rate. The real big event is still to come—this Friday at 9:30 PM, the December Non-Farm Payrolls report will be published, a data release that has historically been a key trigger for crypto price fluctuations and should be closely monitored.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
LightningHarvester
· 5m ago
Institutions are buying the dip faster than retail investors are selling off, this is the gap.
View OriginalReply0
RamenStacker
· 14h ago
Institutions are疯狂扫货, and we retail investors are here cutting losses, this is just too outrageous.
BlackRock吸10亿 overnight, and we're still debating whether to cut or not.
Non-farm payroll data on Friday, it might be another bloodbath then.
Rumble接BTC小费? Haven't used it yet, feels even more虚 now.
Morgan Stanley is also here, traditional finance really treats us like韭菜 to be cultivated.
ETH跌这么惨, feels like it's going to破3000.
Talking about商品定义, it seems监管 is going to出新幺蛾子 again.
This wave of机构吃肉, we are喝汤, when can we turn things around?
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketLightning
· 01-08 11:15
Blackstone's recent buying spree is really aggressive. Are institutions bottoming out? But it feels like it needs to drop to 88k to be stable.
View OriginalReply0
SignatureLiquidator
· 01-08 08:00
Institutions are bottom-fishing while we're cutting losses. How many times has this script been played?
BlackRock has firmly taken advantage of our panic selling, truly formidable.
On Non-Farm Payroll day, you'd better fasten your seatbelt. It might be the next turning point.
View OriginalReply0
MEVSupportGroup
· 01-08 07:54
Institutional buying bottoming out means it won't fall further. Let's follow and enjoy the gains.
View OriginalReply0
ProposalDetective
· 01-08 07:41
I'm optimistic about institutional bottom-fishing in this wave; JPMorgan Chase and Blackstone won't give away for free. Non-farm payroll data is the real knife; we'll see the outcome on Friday.
View OriginalReply0
FunGibleTom
· 01-08 07:41
Institutions are accumulating, retail investors are taking losses—it's the old trick. On non-farm payroll day, it will probably plunge again.
View OriginalReply0
ChainBrain
· 01-08 07:34
Institutions are bottom-fishing, so why are we panicking? Morgan Stanley and BlackRock's moves seem to be positioning themselves at the low point.
The market has been under significant pressure these days. BTC has already dropped to around $90,300, with a 24-hour decline of approximately 2.6%; ETH appears even weaker, fluctuating around $3,120, with a decline of 4.1% over the same period.
However, the actions of institutions are still quite interesting. Morgan Stanley has submitted an application to the SEC for spot ETFs covering BTC, ETH, and SOL, indicating that traditional financial giants are still increasing their exposure to crypto assets. BlackRock has also been active recently, making large purchases of BTC and ETH. According to statistics, the net institutional inflow during this wave of volatility has already exceeded $1 billion.
Payment scenarios are also expanding. Video platform Rumble has integrated Tether wallet functionality, allowing creators to now accept BTC tips directly, further strengthening BTC’s role as a payment method in the content economy.
Policy developments are worth paying attention to. Senator Tim Scott revealed that the Senate Banking Committee is expected to hold a markup vote on the Crypto Market Structure Bill in mid-January, where BTC and ETH might be classified as commodities—this classification could have a significant impact on the overall regulatory framework.
Short-term volatility is expected to amplify. Manufacturing PMI data was released last Friday, showing continued contraction in manufacturing activity, as the market digests the potential impact on the economy and the US dollar exchange rate. The real big event is still to come—this Friday at 9:30 PM, the December Non-Farm Payrolls report will be published, a data release that has historically been a key trigger for crypto price fluctuations and should be closely monitored.