Merry Christmas. This important Western holiday is actually a key time point for the crypto circle. Historically, whenever major holidays approach, liquidity pressure becomes evident—year-end clearing, asset management institutions adjusting their positions—all lead to a noticeable correction trend. Although this round of decline came slightly earlier than in previous years, it still fundamentally belongs to the typical "holiday market" pattern.
Why does capital tend to flee at the end of the year? Ultimately, it is due to institutional annual clearing needs. But from another perspective, the period after Christmas signals a relief in capital pressure. The real test is actually New Year’s Day, which is the peak period for fund liquidation. Interestingly, many historical bull market initiations have coincided with the period before or after the Spring Festival—taking advantage of most retail investors being on holiday and not watching the markets, while institutions quietly accumulate positions. Combined with recent oscillation patterns, the probability of prices retesting support levels remains high, which is why the "buy only, sell none" logic currently holds.
Another noteworthy detail is the continuous devaluation of USDT. Besides the inherent negative premium of Tether itself, the fundamental driver is the appreciation pressure of the RMB against the US dollar. In the long term, holding dollar assets actually faces less pressure—inflation cycles are now a certainty, and for investors like us, dollar liquidity pressure can even be an opportunity. Short-term fluctuations should not be over-interpreted; the key is to seize the window of capital mismatch at the right nodes.
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GateUser-addcaaf7
· 2025-12-27 22:43
The narrative that institutions are quietly accumulating shares has been heard quite a bit. Is it really that systematic?
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 2025-12-27 08:22
The tricks of institutional accumulation are played year after year, and retail investors just have to obediently lie flat.
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SleepyArbCat
· 2025-12-27 00:30
Institutions play this liquidation game every year, and retail investors are still worried, haha... Wait, the devaluation of USDT is actually interesting. Could the dollar liquidity pressure be an opportunity? I need to sleep on this logic and think it over again.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 2025-12-25 08:56
Hmm... so is now the best time to buy the dip?
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ContractBugHunter
· 2025-12-25 08:55
The idea of institutions accumulating shares is heard too often, but I don't believe it anyway.
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Buy and hold? That sounds the best when you're actually losing quite a bit.
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Year-end account clearing is a reason given every year; why are people still getting caught?
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USDT devaluation has been obvious for a long time, but no one dares to act.
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I experienced the wave of accumulation during the Spring Festival, but it still ended up crashing like a dog.
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Waiting for the New Year's wave? I can't wait; I've already liquidated everything.
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It sounds good, but honestly, it's just a gamble on probabilities. If you bet wrong, you shout about cutting losses.
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Misallocation of funds window? Just listen and don't take it seriously.
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ProbablyNothing
· 2025-12-25 08:49
The phrase "institutional accumulation" has become tiresome; retail investors always end up holding the bag last.
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VirtualRichDream
· 2025-12-25 08:40
Damn, it's the same old holiday money-grabbing script again.
While institutions were accumulating, we were still watching the market. LOL
This wave of USDT is interesting, but do they really dare to only buy and not sell?
New Year's Day is the real test; those Christmas fluctuations are nothing.
I missed the institutional market move before the Spring Festival, so it's good if I can catch the bottom this time.
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MetaverseMortgage
· 2025-12-25 08:39
I'm tired of the phrase "institutional accumulation," why is it always this reason every time?
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gas_fee_therapist
· 2025-12-25 08:38
Here we go again with the holiday market talk; whether it's reliable or not, it's hard to say.
I've heard so much about institutions accumulating positions, but I haven't seen it happen many times.
As for USDT devaluation, that's somewhat interesting; gotta keep an eye on it.
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DAOdreamer
· 2025-12-25 08:27
The phrase "institutional accumulation" has become tiresome; those who can truly make money are quietly hoarding coins.
Merry Christmas. This important Western holiday is actually a key time point for the crypto circle. Historically, whenever major holidays approach, liquidity pressure becomes evident—year-end clearing, asset management institutions adjusting their positions—all lead to a noticeable correction trend. Although this round of decline came slightly earlier than in previous years, it still fundamentally belongs to the typical "holiday market" pattern.
Why does capital tend to flee at the end of the year? Ultimately, it is due to institutional annual clearing needs. But from another perspective, the period after Christmas signals a relief in capital pressure. The real test is actually New Year’s Day, which is the peak period for fund liquidation. Interestingly, many historical bull market initiations have coincided with the period before or after the Spring Festival—taking advantage of most retail investors being on holiday and not watching the markets, while institutions quietly accumulate positions. Combined with recent oscillation patterns, the probability of prices retesting support levels remains high, which is why the "buy only, sell none" logic currently holds.
Another noteworthy detail is the continuous devaluation of USDT. Besides the inherent negative premium of Tether itself, the fundamental driver is the appreciation pressure of the RMB against the US dollar. In the long term, holding dollar assets actually faces less pressure—inflation cycles are now a certainty, and for investors like us, dollar liquidity pressure can even be an opportunity. Short-term fluctuations should not be over-interpreted; the key is to seize the window of capital mismatch at the right nodes.