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When Wall Street starts buying BTC, retail investors may not have realized one thing
In the world of investing, there is a classic rule:
When large funds enter the market, they usually don't ring the bell.
They prefer to act quietly.
Recently, several market signals have been very typical.
Eric Trump announced that the US holds 6,500 BTC.
Blackstone increased its holdings by 17,600 BTC.
Meanwhile, US regulators are accelerating cryptocurrency legislation.
These three events may seem unrelated, but in fact they form a complete logic:
Capital inflow → Rule establishment → Market expansion
This pattern has occurred many times in history.
For example, during the early days of internet company IPOs.
For example, during the early development of the ETF market.
When institutions start participating, the market size often expands rapidly.
Because institutions have an advantage that retail investors do not:
Capital scale.
The adjustment of a large fund's allocation can be equivalent to the trading volume of hundreds of thousands of retail investors.
So many analysts believe that if institutional allocation ratios gradually increase, the Bitcoin market could enter a new phase.
Of course, this does not mean prices will keep rising.
After institutions enter the market, the volatility structure will also change.
$BTC