The Federal Reserve just announced a 25 basis point rate cut, bringing the interest rate range to 3.50%-3.75%. By rights, this should be good news for the market. But what happened? Bitcoin didn’t rise but fell instead, and many people are saying they just don’t understand.
Actually, this is quite interesting upon closer examination.
**Smart money has already run ahead** Expectations of a rate cut have been flying around for half a month, and those with keen senses had already positioned themselves in advance. Once the official announcement was made, those who had made gains quickly sold off to cash out—it's a typical case of "good news turning into bad news." While retail investors are still celebrating, the big players are already dumping.
**The real blow comes later** Powell’s speech revealed a key point: there might only be one rate cut by 2026. Previously, the market was expecting multiple consecutive rate cuts. Now, those expectations have been directly halved. As liquidity tightens, everyone’s illusions of a bull market are shattered instantly, and panic begins to spread.
**The Fed itself is divided** This time, there were three dissenting votes, indicating that even within the Fed, there is no consensus on inflation risks and policy direction. The more uncertain the policy path, the less the market dares to gamble, and investor confidence naturally wavers.
So you see, rate cuts should be good news, but they’re overshadowed by overextended expectations, a compressed rate cut space in the future, and internal disagreements among decision-makers. The accumulation of these three blows is why Bitcoin didn’t fall. This wave is a classic case of "good news turning into bad news."
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rekt_but_not_broke
· 12-11 20:26
It's the same old trick of "buy the rumor, sell the news," and it still gets hammered down. Retail investors are always the last to know.
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MoonBoi42
· 12-11 05:51
It's the same old story again, smart money runs early, retail investors buy the dip, classic move, buddy.
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potentially_notable
· 12-11 05:50
It's the same old trick again. The smart money has already run away, and we're retail investors still waiting foolishly there.
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LiquidityNinja
· 12-11 05:49
It's the same old story, the smart money cutting the leeks. Retail investors are always the last to know.
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ChainMemeDealer
· 12-11 05:48
Oh, it's that old trick of "good news selling off" again. The smart money should have already run, and we're still foolishly waiting.
Only one rate cut in 2026? Doesn't that mean there's no real bull market? Once the illusion is shattered, the market will have to crash.
Three internal votes against, even the Federal Reserve itself is not unified. This situation is truly outrageous.
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SchrodingerAirdrop
· 12-11 05:28
Same old trick... Smart money has already moved on, retail investors are still waiting foolishly.
The Federal Reserve just announced a 25 basis point rate cut, bringing the interest rate range to 3.50%-3.75%. By rights, this should be good news for the market. But what happened? Bitcoin didn’t rise but fell instead, and many people are saying they just don’t understand.
Actually, this is quite interesting upon closer examination.
**Smart money has already run ahead**
Expectations of a rate cut have been flying around for half a month, and those with keen senses had already positioned themselves in advance. Once the official announcement was made, those who had made gains quickly sold off to cash out—it's a typical case of "good news turning into bad news." While retail investors are still celebrating, the big players are already dumping.
**The real blow comes later**
Powell’s speech revealed a key point: there might only be one rate cut by 2026. Previously, the market was expecting multiple consecutive rate cuts. Now, those expectations have been directly halved. As liquidity tightens, everyone’s illusions of a bull market are shattered instantly, and panic begins to spread.
**The Fed itself is divided**
This time, there were three dissenting votes, indicating that even within the Fed, there is no consensus on inflation risks and policy direction. The more uncertain the policy path, the less the market dares to gamble, and investor confidence naturally wavers.
So you see, rate cuts should be good news, but they’re overshadowed by overextended expectations, a compressed rate cut space in the future, and internal disagreements among decision-makers. The accumulation of these three blows is why Bitcoin didn’t fall. This wave is a classic case of "good news turning into bad news."