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U.S. ETF attracts $8.5 billion in a single day: Wall Street finally admits that "cash is the biggest leek"
U.S. ETF capital inflows hit a new annual high, with a single-day net inflow of up to $8.5 billion. Seeing this number, many veteran players in the crypto circle's first reaction is not excitement, but: "They are finally here."
In the past few years, the crypto market has had a fantasy: once Wall Street enters, everything will be different. Now that Wall Street has really arrived, everyone realizes that they are not here to "help retail investors get rich," but to set new game rules.
The biggest significance of ETFs is not the price, but the "legal entry point." Previously, buying Bitcoin required studying wallets, mnemonic phrases, and on-chain security; now institutions only need to click on the ETF code, just as simple as buying Apple stocks.
So the question arises: as more and more traditional funds pour in, will Bitcoin gradually lose its "rebel spirit"? In the past, BTC was like rock music; now it increasingly resembles bank savings plans.
But the market has never rejected liquidity. The $8.5 billion inflow demonstrates a reality: global capital is still searching for high-growth assets. Especially against the backdrop of the Federal Reserve's repeated rate cut expectations, crypto assets still hold enormous appeal.
Of course, Wall Street's money is also very risky. They enter quickly, and exit even faster. Today, they can push the market up; tomorrow, they might trample and leave. So truly mature investors will not be blindly optimistic because of "institutional entry," but will start thinking: who will be the last bag-holder in this round of market?