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Recently, some people have been linking ETF fund flows, U.S. stock market risk appetite, and crypto price movements together for interpretation. After a while, it becomes a bit exhausting... What I care about more now is: how exactly are the project team's treasury funds being spent? To put it simply, I'm not afraid of spending money; I'm afraid of spending it without a plan—are the milestones that should be achieved being delivered on time? Delays are okay, but the reasons must be clear, and the next steps should be explained; simply releasing a few event posters doesn't count as "building."
I usually focus on a few small details: Is the spending increasingly biased toward "buying traffic/buying sentiment," or can I see real investments in R&D, security audits, and infrastructure? Also, regarding the team's roadmap, how much of it can be matched when reviewing every few months? Community governance is the same—lots of votes don't mean seriousness; what's important is whether there are follow-ups after proposals and whether there’s a review.
What I fear most isn't loss, but losing control—when you can't understand where the money is going or the rhythm is driven by narratives, that feeling is really unacceptable. Anyway, in a bear market, I prefer the small cabin mode: spend less time watching charts, more time reviewing project ledgers and weekly reports. The ones who can survive are probably those "seemingly boring but actually working."