Just watching this unfold in real time and honestly, the political situation is getting pretty wild. You've got the military establishment openly at odds with the administration now - and when that happens, everything else tends to break down fast. A sitting general basically calling the leadership a madman, publicly? That's the kind of thing that used to be unthinkable. But here we are.



What's striking is how quickly this bleeds into markets. The moment you get this level of internal conflict, especially between the military and political establishment, investors start asking harder questions. Uncertainty spikes. And when uncertainty spikes, capital doesn't stick around - it runs.

Bitcoin's been getting hit hard because of this. As a high-beta risk asset, it's one of the first things to dump when political risk starts climbing. You see it every time - the moment there's a whiff of instability at the top, speculative money exits first. Gold's supposed to be the safe haven, right? But here's the thing - in the short term, when panic really sets in and liquidity dries up, even gold can get dragged down. Fear selling doesn't discriminate.

The broader picture is messy. You've got this authoritarian-style rhetoric on foreign policy mixed with open conflict at home. That's a toxic combo for both risk assets and traditional hedges. Markets hate this kind of environment because there's no clear playbook anymore.

Historically, when you see military leadership publicly breaking ranks like this, it rarely ends well. The instability tends to persist, confidence erodes, and asset prices take damage. We're in uncharted territory here.

I'm keeping a close eye on how Bitcoin and gold move through this. Both are vulnerable right now given the political risk premium. Definitely worth monitoring the next few days - this kind of crisis tends to accelerate quickly once it starts. Stay sharp out there.
BTC-0,79%
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
  • Pin