Next week's Federal Reserve interest rate hike decision is indeed a risk point worth paying attention to, as it could stir market sentiment and liquidity. However, honestly, events like these usually only cause short-term volatility and are unlikely to fundamentally change Bitcoin's long-term trend.
Some people obsessively monitor macroeconomic data for trading, but this approach is somewhat superficial. A more reliable method is to view interest rates and central bank actions as an entry point to observe market sentiment and liquidity conditions—nothing more. The true determinant of an asset's long-term fate still boils down to the core question: can it solve real problems and meet genuine needs?
Take projects deeply engaged in tangible empowerment as an example; their core support lies in the actual progress of offline promotion and user growth dynamics, which are not strongly correlated with short-term interest rate fluctuations. When the entire market is declining, if these projects can demonstrate unique value propositions and tangible development steps, they may instead serve as a stabilizing force for investor confidence. That’s why some community projects can stand out against the downturn—because their stories stand the test.
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DAOTruant
· 12-15 05:33
The Bank of Japan's issues are basically short-term noise. Ultimately, whether it's profitable depends on whether the project itself is viable.
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CryptoTarotReader
· 12-15 05:21
The Bank of Japan's issues, to put it simply, are short-term bloodshed. Truly good projects are not panicking at all; focusing on fundamentals is the real key.
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LiquidatedDreams
· 12-14 18:50
Macroeconomic data, to put it simply, is just for entertainment; the real growth depends on whether the project itself can be implemented.
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HodlOrRegret
· 12-14 18:50
Short-term event hype is not interesting; what's important is whether the project itself has real substance.
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SchrodingerPrivateKey
· 12-14 18:50
The macro data fanatic really needs to wake up; short-term fluctuations can't catch the long-term fish.
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gas_fee_trauma
· 12-14 18:33
Macro data snipers, it's time to wake up; short-term fluctuations can't fundamentally shake the truly valuable projects.
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TommyTeacher1
· 12-14 18:25
The Bank of Japan situation, yeah, it might cause some short-term fluctuations, but it really won't turn the tide. Those who keep an eye on K-lines all day are a bit naive.
Next week's Federal Reserve interest rate hike decision is indeed a risk point worth paying attention to, as it could stir market sentiment and liquidity. However, honestly, events like these usually only cause short-term volatility and are unlikely to fundamentally change Bitcoin's long-term trend.
Some people obsessively monitor macroeconomic data for trading, but this approach is somewhat superficial. A more reliable method is to view interest rates and central bank actions as an entry point to observe market sentiment and liquidity conditions—nothing more. The true determinant of an asset's long-term fate still boils down to the core question: can it solve real problems and meet genuine needs?
Take projects deeply engaged in tangible empowerment as an example; their core support lies in the actual progress of offline promotion and user growth dynamics, which are not strongly correlated with short-term interest rate fluctuations. When the entire market is declining, if these projects can demonstrate unique value propositions and tangible development steps, they may instead serve as a stabilizing force for investor confidence. That’s why some community projects can stand out against the downturn—because their stories stand the test.