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Employment data divergence and rising geopolitical tensions in oil prices—where is the liquidity turning point in the crypto market?
【BlockBeats】Recently, the US released employment data that showed an interesting contrast. In December, ADP employment rebounded to 41,000, which sounds pretty good and indicates that companies are still hiring; but looking at the JOLTS job openings data, it continues to decline—actual figures at 7.146 million keep decreasing, meaning that although companies are still hiring, actual demand is cooling down. This situation, where the current data looks okay but the outlook is less optimistic, makes Federal Reserve decision-making more complicated.
On the geopolitical front, things are also unsettled. The US has significantly escalated its oil embargo against Venezuela, directly seizing two oil tankers in international waters carrying Venezuelan crude, one of which was escorted by the Russian Navy. This is not a minor move but a real attempt to semi-block Venezuela’s “shadow fleet,” while also testing the bottom line of sanctions and freedom of navigation between Russia and the US.
For financial markets, this has become a “tug-of-war” situation. Strong ADP data support the US dollar and interest rate expectations in the short term, but the decline in JOLTS and rising geopolitical energy risks mean that overall macroeconomic uncertainty has not dissipated. Oil supply risks have resurfaced, and inflation expectations and risk aversion sentiments may begin to intertwine and ferment.
For the crypto market, the key is not whether one data point looks good or bad, but whether liquidity expectations will experience a new turning point. The divergence in employment data and the escalation of energy geopolitical risks are both at play; short-term pricing may remain at current levels, but in the medium term, caution is needed regarding the risks of demand cooling and supply shocks occurring simultaneously.