Cryptocurrency and mainstream hotspots are increasingly resembling each other. Global financial hotspots and technological innovations can influence market sentiment here, as well as the trends of various cryptocurrencies. This year has already shown numerous examples where suddenly emerging hotspots directly disrupted the trends of certain coins, accelerating everything. We must remain vigilant and not be misled by these hotspots.
The correlation between Bitcoin and the entire cryptocurrency market may be weakening. They might start to move independently, no longer rising and falling together as before. This poses both risks and opportunities for us; we need to learn to diversify our investments and not put all our eggs in one basket.
Next year, Americans and South Koreans are likely to remain the main forces in the cryptocurrency market. However, if the Bank of Japan really starts to flood the market, unexpected funds may pour in, and we need to be prepared.
When there is a lot of hot money, we can speculate on concepts and chase hotspots, but when hot money is scarce, we need to be more pragmatic and focus on projects with strong fundamentals, stable growth, and high profits. By the end of the year, let's see which projects have exaggerated stories; we might find treasures.
After the SEC replaces ZX, the reform and opening up of cryptocurrencies may accelerate. We need to pay attention after February to see if cryptocurrency projects will make any significant moves. They might be holding back a bunch of 'good news that would originally be classified as securities.'