Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Pre-IPOs
Unlock full access to global stock IPOs
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
#Gate广场四月发帖挑战
Let's analyze in detail Bitcoin's "asymmetric" response pattern to macro data across different market cycles. The core conclusion is: in a bull market, focus on narratives, dampening negative news; in a bear market, macro factors dominate, and positive news is ineffective.
🐂 Bull Market Cycle: Amplified positives, muted negatives
In a bullish market sentiment with continuous influx of capital (such as 2020-2021, early 2024), Bitcoin demonstrates strong resilience.
Key characteristic: "Easy to rise, hard to fall," with narratives outweighing data.
Response to positive news: The market is in a "risk appetite" mode, where any positive (such as CPI slightly below expectations, Federal Reserve signaling dovishness) is eagerly interpreted as evidence of sustained liquidity easing, quickly turning into buying pressure. This often leads to prices rapidly breaking through key resistance levels after data releases, forming new upward trends. At this stage, positive news acts as a "finishing touch" accelerator.
Response to negative news: The market shows remarkable "selective ignoring." Even with hawkish data (like CPI exceeding expectations), declines tend to be short-lived, technical corrections rather than trend reversals. With ample market funds, strong dip-buying interest often results in "deep V reversals" or sideways consolidation, waiting for new narratives (such as ETF approvals, halving events) to push prices higher again. The prevailing logic is "bad news is good news" for the market.
Historical evidence: During the May 2024 rally, a CPI report indicating "slight inflation slowdown" triggered Bitcoin's single-day surge of over 7%, with the market completely ignoring the fact that the data remained high.
🐻 Bear Market Cycle: Amplified negatives, positive news ineffective
In a pessimistic market with liquidity drying up (such as 2022, 2018), Bitcoin reverts to its nature as a "high beta risk asset," extremely fragile.
Key characteristic: "Easy to fall, hard to rise," with risk aversion above all.
Response to negative news: This is the most dangerous phase. Any hawkish signals (such as high inflation, accelerated rate hikes) are seen as the final stranglehold on liquidity, triggering panic selling. Due to high leverage and fragile structure, sell-offs can easily trigger chain liquidations, resulting in "waterfall" declines, with drops far exceeding stock markets. At this stage, macro data is the "life and death line" that dominates price movements.
Response to positive news: Even with positive developments (such as rate hike pauses, CPI declines), market confidence is generally lacking. Rebounds tend to be weak and short-lived, often labeled as "dead cat bounces" or "trap rallies," providing opportunities for existing holders to "escape" or for short-sellers to add positions. Without sustained incremental capital, any positive news cannot reverse the downward trend.
Historical evidence: In June 2022, a CPI report hitting a 40-year high of 9.1% caused Bitcoin to plunge over 8% in a single day, breaking below the $20k psychological level and initiating a new round of panic selling, with rebounds being extremely weak.
🔁 Root causes of cycle logic differences
Liquidity levels: Bull markets usually correspond to global liquidity easing or expectations thereof, with "plenty of water and fish"; bear markets correspond to liquidity tightening, with "water scarcity."
Market psychology and structure: In bull markets, investors are "trend followers," eager to chase gains; in bear markets, they are "fearful birds," quick to flee at the slightest disturbance.
Dominant narratives: Bull markets are driven by Bitcoin's own narratives like "halving," "new paradigm," with macro factors playing a secondary role; bear markets are dominated by macro narratives like "inflation," "recession," rendering Bitcoin's own logic ineffective.
In simple terms: During bull markets, Bitcoin is a "flying rocket," with macro data as its fuel or minor turbulence; during bear markets, it is a "kite with a broken string," where every gust of macro wind could send it plunging into the abyss.