Market volatility is on the rise. As for Bitcoin, my approach hasn't reversed but has become more mature.
I remain long-term bullish on Bitcoin, but I am more realistic about how chaotic the road ahead could become. Bitcoin's price does not move in a straight line, especially in the context of tightening global liquidity and rising macro uncertainties. In fact, when an asset is at the intersection of technical, macro, liquidity, and speculative factors, higher volatility is exactly what you should expect. For me, the change lies in how I respond to this volatility. In the short term, Bitcoin has become more sensitive to broader risk conditions. We see the rotation between risk appetite and risk aversion accelerate, liquidations become more intense during leverage build-up, and reversals become sharper when sentiment is overly exuberant. Because of this, I have reduced my position sizes, become more selective about entry points, and completely stopped chasing momentum. In this environment, patience is not passive but a strategy. From a trading perspective, I focus on structure and liquidity. Where is leverage accumulating? Where might traders get trapped? At which points will the price actually invalidate a hypothesis? Bitcoin's punishment for emotional trading is more severe than almost any other asset, and rising volatility only amplifies this. I prefer to do fewer high-conviction trades rather than constantly expose myself in a market that can reverse within minutes. At the same time, my long-term conviction has not weakened; in fact, it has grown stronger. Looking ahead, Bitcoin's maturity as a macro asset continues to improve. Institutional participation is deeper than ever before, infrastructure is more robust, and adoption is no longer just ideological but strategic. Governments around the world continue to run fiscal deficits, the monetary system remains fragile, and trust in traditional financial structures continues to erode. Bitcoin exists outside this system, and with each cycle, this becomes even more important. However, a long-term bullish outlook does not mean ignoring cycles. Bitcoin's price movements have always been phased: expansion, excess, correction, consolidation, then expansion again. Volatility is not a sign of failure but part of the price discovery process of limited assets. The key is which phase of the cycle we are in, not how much short-term noise there is. My forecast for the future is not a straight line upward. I expect continued volatility, sharp pullbacks, and periods of frustration for overly leveraged participants. Bitcoin rarely rewards impatience, but I also expect that over time, structural lows will be higher, demand will increase during weak periods, and the gap between Bitcoin and low-quality crypto assets will gradually widen. I believe the next meaningful rally will come after the market has cleared enough excess, not before. That is why I am willing to wait. Gradually building long-term positions during market downturns, maintaining capital reserves, and letting volatility work for me rather than against me.
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Market volatility is on the rise. As for Bitcoin, my approach hasn't reversed but has become more mature.
I remain long-term bullish on Bitcoin, but I am more realistic about how chaotic the road ahead could become. Bitcoin's price does not move in a straight line, especially in the context of tightening global liquidity and rising macro uncertainties. In fact, when an asset is at the intersection of technical, macro, liquidity, and speculative factors, higher volatility is exactly what you should expect.
For me, the change lies in how I respond to this volatility.
In the short term, Bitcoin has become more sensitive to broader risk conditions. We see the rotation between risk appetite and risk aversion accelerate, liquidations become more intense during leverage build-up, and reversals become sharper when sentiment is overly exuberant. Because of this, I have reduced my position sizes, become more selective about entry points, and completely stopped chasing momentum. In this environment, patience is not passive but a strategy.
From a trading perspective, I focus on structure and liquidity. Where is leverage accumulating? Where might traders get trapped? At which points will the price actually invalidate a hypothesis? Bitcoin's punishment for emotional trading is more severe than almost any other asset, and rising volatility only amplifies this. I prefer to do fewer high-conviction trades rather than constantly expose myself in a market that can reverse within minutes.
At the same time, my long-term conviction has not weakened; in fact, it has grown stronger.
Looking ahead, Bitcoin's maturity as a macro asset continues to improve. Institutional participation is deeper than ever before, infrastructure is more robust, and adoption is no longer just ideological but strategic. Governments around the world continue to run fiscal deficits, the monetary system remains fragile, and trust in traditional financial structures continues to erode. Bitcoin exists outside this system, and with each cycle, this becomes even more important.
However, a long-term bullish outlook does not mean ignoring cycles. Bitcoin's price movements have always been phased: expansion, excess, correction, consolidation, then expansion again. Volatility is not a sign of failure but part of the price discovery process of limited assets. The key is which phase of the cycle we are in, not how much short-term noise there is.
My forecast for the future is not a straight line upward. I expect continued volatility, sharp pullbacks, and periods of frustration for overly leveraged participants. Bitcoin rarely rewards impatience, but I also expect that over time, structural lows will be higher, demand will increase during weak periods, and the gap between Bitcoin and low-quality crypto assets will gradually widen.
I believe the next meaningful rally will come after the market has cleared enough excess, not before. That is why I am willing to wait. Gradually building long-term positions during market downturns, maintaining capital reserves, and letting volatility work for me rather than against me.