The multilateral order is undergoing substantial shifts in 2025, and the question everyone should be asking: how permanent are these changes?
Economic policy experts are now actively debating whether countries will adapt to this new geopolitical and economic landscape—or if we might eventually see reversals. This matters because the structures governing international trade, currency flows, and capital movement directly influence everything from inflation dynamics to asset allocation strategies.
With institutions like CEPR diving deeper into these structural transformations, one thing becomes clear: the old playbook for predicting market cycles is increasingly unreliable. Whether you're trading traditional markets or crypto, understanding how nations recalibrate to shifting multilateral frameworks is no longer optional—it's foundational to grasping where liquidity and volatility will emerge.
The real question isn't just what changes now, but whether any of it sticks around.
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BearMarketBarber
· 4h ago
Will this wave of changes in the multilateral order be reversed? To put it bluntly, it depends on how long each country's policies can hold out. I can't bet on this.
The traditional trading logic has completely failed. What can we rely on for judgment now? Liquidity is truly the real variable, isn't it?
Perseverance is indeed an unavoidable issue, and no one dares to give a definitive answer.
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GasOptimizer
· 14h ago
The old script has expired, but the new script hasn't been written yet... This is awkward. Where does the liquidity come from? We need to first calculate the capital efficiency clearly, otherwise it's just guesswork.
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LightningSentry
· 14h ago
Hmm, the old script is no longer valid. Who dares to be sure what will last now?
The multilateral order is undergoing substantial shifts in 2025, and the question everyone should be asking: how permanent are these changes?
Economic policy experts are now actively debating whether countries will adapt to this new geopolitical and economic landscape—or if we might eventually see reversals. This matters because the structures governing international trade, currency flows, and capital movement directly influence everything from inflation dynamics to asset allocation strategies.
With institutions like CEPR diving deeper into these structural transformations, one thing becomes clear: the old playbook for predicting market cycles is increasingly unreliable. Whether you're trading traditional markets or crypto, understanding how nations recalibrate to shifting multilateral frameworks is no longer optional—it's foundational to grasping where liquidity and volatility will emerge.
The real question isn't just what changes now, but whether any of it sticks around.