The probability of the Federal Reserve holding steady is as high as 90%—but this is not a signal of a dovish turn, nor does it mean an unexpected rate cut. In plain terms, it’s just waiting.
In such an environment, how could the main players sit idly by? What kind of scenario do they need? ✔ Bad news comes one after another, but none of it really hits ✔ Good news is everywhere, but it never materializes ✔ Retail investors’ emotions are repeatedly tortured into numbness
The current rhythm is clear: retail investors are pondering, "As soon as a rate cut comes, I can take off," unaware that the main players are calculating behind the scenes—"When all expectations fall flat and retail investors hand over their chips, that will be our opportunity."
Is no rate cut truly the end of bad news? Not necessarily. Rather than being bad news, it’s a test of patience. Whoever loses control first will have their chips taken over first.
If nothing really happens on January 28th—no surprises, no triggers, nothing at all—what will you see? Emotions will collapse first, and then, in places you can’t quite see clearly, chips will quietly start to shift.
This is the truth of the market: the most ferocious moves never start at the moment good news hits. Quite the opposite, they only come knocking when everyone’s hope is nearly exhausted and despair begins.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
9 Likes
Reward
9
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ForkYouPayMe
· 01-09 21:31
Basically, it's waiting for retail investors to break their defenses first, and then the chips will automatically be handed over. This trick is all too familiar.
View OriginalReply0
AlphaBrain
· 01-09 12:01
Uh, I feel like I've heard this logic somewhere before... The story of the main players cutting leeks is always so predictable.
Retail investors wait for rate cuts to take off, while the main players wait for retail investors to despair and take over, cycle after cycle.
January 28th, when there's nothing left, is the most terrifying.
View OriginalReply0
ImpermanentPhobia
· 01-07 09:09
Coming back to fool retail investors with "despair is the bottom"? I'm tired of hearing this rhetoric until my ears are calloused. I just want to know when the big players can truly "knock on the door" instead of just talking big...
View OriginalReply0
SelfSovereignSteve
· 01-07 09:05
That was really harsh, just waiting for retail investors to surrender themselves.
View OriginalReply0
Rugman_Walking
· 01-07 09:00
It's the same old story of "pumping only after retail investors are desperate"—I've heard it for a year now.
January 28th, will it finally happen?
The probability of the Federal Reserve holding steady is as high as 90%—but this is not a signal of a dovish turn, nor does it mean an unexpected rate cut. In plain terms, it’s just waiting.
In such an environment, how could the main players sit idly by? What kind of scenario do they need?
✔ Bad news comes one after another, but none of it really hits
✔ Good news is everywhere, but it never materializes
✔ Retail investors’ emotions are repeatedly tortured into numbness
The current rhythm is clear: retail investors are pondering, "As soon as a rate cut comes, I can take off," unaware that the main players are calculating behind the scenes—"When all expectations fall flat and retail investors hand over their chips, that will be our opportunity."
Is no rate cut truly the end of bad news? Not necessarily. Rather than being bad news, it’s a test of patience. Whoever loses control first will have their chips taken over first.
If nothing really happens on January 28th—no surprises, no triggers, nothing at all—what will you see? Emotions will collapse first, and then, in places you can’t quite see clearly, chips will quietly start to shift.
This is the truth of the market: the most ferocious moves never start at the moment good news hits. Quite the opposite, they only come knocking when everyone’s hope is nearly exhausted and despair begins.