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#加密市场反弹 The interpretation is very accurate👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
As geopolitical tensions escalate, gold and crude oil prices surge rapidly, and US stock futures come under pressure, the crypto market has nonetheless completed a structural rebound.
Bitcoin has risen over 6%, with Ethereum strengthening in tandem. Crypto-related stocks have seen even more significant gains, with Circle up over 12%, and Strategy and Cb following upward.
On the surface, this is a “rising amidst conflict.” But if we dissect the capital flow, it resembles more a position reset after risk clearance.
In the early stages of the conflict, Bitcoin briefly dipped below $64,000, triggering approximately $300 million in long liquidations. Funds quickly flowed into gold and energy assets, a typical risk-avoidance path. Highly leveraged positions were passively forced out first, completing a rapid de-risking process.
But the key lies in the second phase.
As leverage is wiped out, long pressure in the derivatives market diminishes significantly, funding rates approach zero or turn negative, and market sentiment shifts toward defense. Under this structure, the price failed to break lower and instead signaled a rebound—short covering combined with hedging buy orders drove a rapid price recovery.
This is not a bullish signal from the war, but a technical correction following risk release.
In highly derivatives-driven markets, prices tend to reflect position structures first, then macro narratives. When long positions are cleared, downward momentum naturally diminishes; when shorts are concentrated, upward elasticity is amplified. This rebound is essentially a rebalancing of positions.
It’s worth noting that in this rebound, crypto stocks outperformed Bitcoin itself significantly. This phenomenon is not uncommon, but it carries more symbolic meaning in the current environment.
Strategy is essentially a leveraged expression of Bitcoin’s price. Its balance sheet is highly tied to Bitcoin; when the coin price rebounds, its stock price tends to be more elastic. When the coin price retraces, risks also amplify. Market pricing of it is more a bet on the future direction of the coin price.
Cb is a “volatility-beneficiary” asset. Whether prices rise or fall, as long as trading activity increases, its income expectations improve. The position reset triggered by conflict and increased trading volume support short-term profit recovery.
Circle’s performance is particularly notable. Its rise not only reflects a market rebound but also relates to the strengthening of the stablecoin narrative. Amid geopolitical risks, on-chain USD settlement systems are gaining renewed attention. Stablecoins, as the liquidity core of the crypto ecosystem, are seen as having “infrastructure attributes” in uncertain environments. When the market reinterprets them from mere trading tools to fundamental financial channels, valuation logic naturally shifts.
This also explains why Circle’s gains lead—it's not just a participant in the crypto market but is viewed as a node in the crypto financial system.
As for Bitcoin itself, it exhibits a “hybrid attribute” in this event. In the initial phase of risk release, it still behaves as a high-beta asset, declining in tandem with tech stocks; but after leverage is cleared, its recovery speed is noticeably faster than traditional risk assets. This phased differentiation begins to open new discussion space for the “digital gold” narrative.
However, this attribute switch remains fragile.
Bitcoin’s liquidity structure means it still cannot fully shed its risk asset label amid global risk fluctuations. What truly determines its long-term positioning is not just its performance during a single conflict, but its behavior in systemic credit risks in the future.
In other words, this rebound is more like a microstructure repair in the market rather than a macro logical reversal.
It’s important to be cautious: this rally is driven more by structural repair than by the disappearance of macro risks. The conflict is not over, liquidity in the financial system has not truly tightened, nor has there been substantial improvement.
If the conflict escalates into systemic financial risk, crypto assets will remain under pressure; if the situation remains manageable, prices may continue to push toward the upper end of the range. But before leverage re-escalates, the market will find it difficult to form a sustained directional trend.
The signals from this rebound are not a “war positive” for crypto assets, but rather a market rebalancing after a rapid deleveraging.
In today’s crypto market, prices are increasingly a function of positions rather than narratives. Bitcoin’s rise amidst conflict is not a shift in sentiment but a typical risk reset. When leverage is cleared, prices have room to rebound. Only when the structure rebalances will the true directional choice emerge.