The downside potential of this market correction is actually quite limited now. The key is to view the market from a rebound perspective. After Japan raised interest rates, the market trend truly changed—the downward logic was interrupted.
The main reason is the counteracting forces at play: while Japan's rate hike was implemented, the US launched the RMP (Savings Management Purchase) mechanism. When these two forces meet, they directly alter the market’s trajectory. The expected trend of decline was "supported," turning instead into sideways consolidation.
In early December, the US officially ended QE, but this does not mean liquidity will tighten. In fact, the way liquidity is released has simply changed. Starting from January next year, the US will release liquidity through the RMP, injecting about $400 billion into the market each month. The difference is clear: QE involves buying long-term government bonds, while RMP involves buying short-term government bonds.
Since the 2008 financial crisis, the market’s perception of QE has been labeled as "massive liquidity injection," and public opposition has grown. In contrast, as a new liquidity tool, RMP has fewer of these noises. Therefore, although QE has ended, the market has not experienced the systemic decline everyone anticipated.
Another noteworthy phenomenon is that many altcoins have entered a "no longer falling" stage. The performance shows a significant decrease in trading volume during declines, with selling pressure repeatedly absorbed, making it difficult to push prices down further and deplete liquidity. Some coins are even showing clear signs of capital accumulation and price manipulation.
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TooScaredToSell
· 8h ago
Damn, the RMP strategy is much more covert than QE. With less public opinion noise, they can continue to pump liquidity. Looking at it this way, it really holds things up.
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ForkYouPayMe
· 8h ago
Alright, this round is indeed interesting. RMP's tactics are pretty slick.
Coins that can't be hammered down have already been accumulating. Can't you see that?
QE changed its name to RMP, playing word games.
The bottom trading volume of altcoins is already terrible, and that's the signal, brother.
Horizontal consolidation? Isn't it just waiting for the next main upward wave?
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PaperHandsCriminal
· 8h ago
Wait, RMP is just a name change to keep pumping, as if it were real... Does reducing public opinion resistance actually make it truly effective?
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SignatureDenied
· 8h ago
This round is just a change of soup without changing the medicine; QE becomes RMP and the liquidity injection continues.
Wait, do you really believe the signs of accumulation and manipulation by scam coins? I think most of it is the whales testing the bottom.
Japan's rate hike + US RMP hedging, in plain terms, is just everyone trying to prevent the market from truly collapsing—it's all about capital games.
Rebound structure? That sounds like justifying not cutting losses, haha.
$400 billion per month—this scale is beyond my expectations, no wonder the sideways movement is so stable.
The downside potential of this market correction is actually quite limited now. The key is to view the market from a rebound perspective. After Japan raised interest rates, the market trend truly changed—the downward logic was interrupted.
The main reason is the counteracting forces at play: while Japan's rate hike was implemented, the US launched the RMP (Savings Management Purchase) mechanism. When these two forces meet, they directly alter the market’s trajectory. The expected trend of decline was "supported," turning instead into sideways consolidation.
In early December, the US officially ended QE, but this does not mean liquidity will tighten. In fact, the way liquidity is released has simply changed. Starting from January next year, the US will release liquidity through the RMP, injecting about $400 billion into the market each month. The difference is clear: QE involves buying long-term government bonds, while RMP involves buying short-term government bonds.
Since the 2008 financial crisis, the market’s perception of QE has been labeled as "massive liquidity injection," and public opposition has grown. In contrast, as a new liquidity tool, RMP has fewer of these noises. Therefore, although QE has ended, the market has not experienced the systemic decline everyone anticipated.
Another noteworthy phenomenon is that many altcoins have entered a "no longer falling" stage. The performance shows a significant decrease in trading volume during declines, with selling pressure repeatedly absorbed, making it difficult to push prices down further and deplete liquidity. Some coins are even showing clear signs of capital accumulation and price manipulation.