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Recent signals of risk in the international markets continue to emerge. The US government has announced that starting February 1st, a 10% tariff will be imposed on European goods, and if negotiations make no progress within five months, the tariff will be raised to 25%. The European Union immediately responded that this is "unacceptable," and 27 member states are preparing retaliatory measures, with a retaliation list expected to be announced this Monday.
This round of trade friction escalation is not an isolated event. Historical data shows that during the US-EU trade disputes in 2019, global stock markets experienced significant volatility, and the cryptocurrency market was also under pressure. Considering that the US stock market is closed on Monday, the related negative expectations may be concentrated on Tuesday, when risk appetite among funds declines, putting pressure on all high-valuation assets.
More notably, changes in monetary policy are worth paying attention to. Recently, Federal Reserve officials explicitly stated that they will pause the rate cut cycle at the end of January, mainly because inflation data still has not reached the target level. On the international level, major economies such as Japan and Europe have also stopped cutting interest rates or even started raising them. This indicates that global liquidity is marginally tightening, and high-valuation assets like Bitcoin and tech stocks have recently hit record highs, which indeed creates internal adjustment pressures.
Historically, cryptocurrencies are highly correlated with the macro liquidity environment. When market funds shift to a cautious outlook, short-term corrections often occur suddenly. Although current coin prices are still on an upward trajectory, the risk accumulation during this rise cannot be ignored. Investors are advised to closely monitor the progress of Federal Reserve meetings and EU retaliatory measures, and to prepare for risk management in advance.
Be careful on Tuesday, when risk appetite picks up, everything at high levels is vulnerable.
History repeats itself; the same pattern from 2019 is happening again now.
With liquidity tightening—really—Federal Reserve, Japan, and Europe are all raising interest rates. When prices hit new highs, it's even more dangerous.
Short-term corrections are inevitable; don’t be fooled by the false illusion of rising prices.
I think it's time to stay steady now, and wait until the EU retaliation list comes out before making any moves.
Looking forward to next Tuesday, I feel there might be some action.
Once tariffs are upgraded, risk appetite disappears, and high-priced coins are directly dumped
Tightening liquidity is the real killer; I remember the 2019 wave clearly
Recently, new highs have indeed been reached, but it feels very hollow
It's better to cut your position in half first for stability
Feels like Tuesday is going to explode, everyone ready with bullets?
History always repeats itself, I remember the 2019 wave was bloodshed
High-valuation assets really need to be cautious right now, it's not like they can keep rising just because they go up
Getting off-topic, just asking, are people still bottom-fishing at this time or have they all chickened out?
The Federal Reserve is really ruthless, they say stop and they stop
So, cryptocurrencies still depend on how the US and Europe clash with each other