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Yesterday early morning, the crypto community was hit by three consecutive messages:
The first, U.S. crypto legislation is "like a bulldozer" crushing regulatory obstacles. Congress, institutions, and traditional financial sectors rarely sit at the negotiation table together, and key legislation set for January next year is almost finalized.
The second, the U.S. Treasury announced repurchasing $3.714 billion worth of government bonds. This move is straightforward—the government is actively injecting liquidity into the system.
The third, Federal Reserve Board member Waller publicly stated: employment market data supports continued rate cuts.
On their own, each seems like a "positive signal," but when combined, the logical chain becomes clear:
Legal side: Crypto assets officially enter the national financial system, significantly reducing regulatory uncertainty.
Fiscal side: Spending to buy back government bonds is equivalent to actively easing the flow of funds.
Monetary side: Central bank leaders are paving the way for continued rate cuts, indicating that the era of cheap money will persist.
This is not just a pile-up of positive signals but a triple resonance of legislation, fiscal policy, and monetary policy. In financial markets, when such signals appear simultaneously at this level, it usually marks a critical point—from "possible" to "inevitable."
In the past, we all wondered when institutions would enter the market on a large scale. Now, the answer is clear: not only are they coming, but they are also actively paving the way. When the legal fortress is dismantled, liquidity gates are opened, and policymakers openly encourage easing, the revaluation of asset prices is no longer a question of "if" but "how fast."
The market's rhythm often goes like this: dare to position during pullbacks, dare to act during booms.