【Is the bull market engine restarting?】



Many people are still watching the K-line but ignoring the things that truly determine the market direction.

In the past few months, the global macro environment has been quietly changing.

Although the Federal Reserve has not started large-scale interest rate cuts, the market has already begun to price in expectations of liquidity easing. U.S. debt levels are hitting new highs, fiscal deficits are continuously expanding, and in the long run, currency devaluation is almost an inevitable trend.

Gold continues to stay high, essentially casting a vote of no confidence in the global credit system.

And Bitcoin is becoming the gold of the digital age.

From the flow of funds, institutional money has not exited; spot ETF holdings are continuously increasing, and large addresses are also growing. Every pullback seems more like a transfer of chips from retail investors to institutions.

On the technical side, Bitcoin remains in a long-term upward channel; high-level oscillations have not broken the bull market structure. Historical experience tells us that truly crazy rallies often don’t start when everyone is most optimistic but erupt suddenly when most people are doubtful, hesitant, or even panicking.

Next, the market is likely to experience:

① BTC oscillating to accumulate chips
② ETH beginning to catch up in gains
③ Funds flowing into altcoins
④ Meme and AI sectors roaring again

If global liquidity continues to improve, this round of market movement in 2026 may still be far from over.

Don’t miss the long-term trend because of short-term fluctuations.

The market rewards not the smartest people, but those who can keep holding onto high-quality chips.

The biggest enemy of a bull market is not a decline.

It’s you getting off before takeoff.
🚀
GLDX0.73%
PAXG-0.14%
BTC1.86%
ETH1.89%
MEME1.80%
View Original
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.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pinned