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The market has indeed been a bit tough these past couple of days. Trump directly intervened, and I also started to buy the dip. I had a pretty good plan—thinking that the policy turmoil would be over, and Europe would calm down. But what happened? It didn't.
Where's the problem? Maybe the rhetoric wasn't negotiated properly; both sides are just arguing verbally. As a result, Europe directly targeted US assets, with Nordic pension fund leaders publicly stating that the risk premium on US assets has already increased. This made the market even more uncomfortable.
Although tariff pressures have temporarily eased, if Europe truly divests, the impact won't be on the same scale. Once European funds reprice US assets from a low-risk preference, requiring higher risk premiums to offset, the three anchors—US stocks, US bonds, and the US dollar—will all be pulled simultaneously. That's the real issue.
What's more painful is that this tariff shock has been extended from a one-time event into a longer narrative. Europe has already started to incorporate geopolitical and policy uncertainties directly into the US asset pricing models. Once this is confirmed by investment committees, short-term reversal becomes unlikely. The market's next pain point won't be whether tariffs are canceled but whether global capital will demand higher costs for US assets.
If Europe truly reduces its holdings, then the rebound in risk assets is just a technical correction, not a trend-driven inflow.
Back to Bitcoin data. The turnover rate remains relatively low, mainly due to short-term investors selling. Overall investor sentiment is still relatively stable, with no signs of panic deepening. From the current situation, the tariff crisis has been temporarily resolved, but the next variable depends on how the attitudes of European and American capital evolve.