The end of the year in the crypto world is indeed a bit awkward—Bitcoin is repeatedly fluctuating here, trying to find a bottom, while a bunch of funds are moving into hard assets like gold, and even Bitcoin ETFs are starting to see net outflows. The market seems a bit cold.
But, another story is happening simultaneously. Some truly knowledgeable funds are quietly positioning themselves; they are focusing on projects that have real logic. Why? Because they are very clear—that the current market money isn't completely leaving, but rather fleeing from air projects and shifting toward things that can truly create value.
The threshold for smart money to choose projects is just two: first, it must have scarcity; second, it must be able to truly land, ideally both at the same time. Take ASTER as an example—it meets both criteria. One is the Burndrop plan—continuously buying back and destroying tokens through profits, reducing circulation, which is a real deflationary support. The other is the partnership with SBI Holdings to launch a Japanese yen stablecoin. What does this mean? It means opening up real application scenarios in traditional finance, no longer just an air castle.
"Reduce supply, expand demand"—this combination is actually rare in the current market. The bottom of the market is often a good opportunity for layout, but the prerequisite is that you can distinguish between genuine and fake projects. Those projects that only boast but lack real business support will only die faster in downturns.
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.
5 Likes
Reward
5
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
degenonymous
· 10h ago
Alright, this round is definitely a knockout stage. Genuine projects and scam coins have quickly separated themselves.
View OriginalReply0
NotFinancialAdvice
· 22h ago
Honestly, those still bottom-fishing are true believers; everyone else has already gone to buy gold, haha.
View OriginalReply0
FantasyGuardian
· 22h ago
Alright, it's that same story of "smart money positioning itself in the shadows." Burndrop sounds good, but how many actually get implemented?
View OriginalReply0
LiquidationOracle
· 22h ago
Well, there's nothing wrong with this idea, but it has to be truly implementable. The concept of deflation has already been overused.
View OriginalReply0
On-ChainDiver
· 22h ago
The bottom is indeed an opportunity, but the prerequisite is having real value. Those who only talk about stories should have been eliminated long ago.
View OriginalReply0
0xLostKey
· 22h ago
Bottom layout is indeed a craft, but the real challenge is how to find that pearl among a pile of bad projects. Frankly, it still depends on years of keen intuition.
The end of the year in the crypto world is indeed a bit awkward—Bitcoin is repeatedly fluctuating here, trying to find a bottom, while a bunch of funds are moving into hard assets like gold, and even Bitcoin ETFs are starting to see net outflows. The market seems a bit cold.
But, another story is happening simultaneously. Some truly knowledgeable funds are quietly positioning themselves; they are focusing on projects that have real logic. Why? Because they are very clear—that the current market money isn't completely leaving, but rather fleeing from air projects and shifting toward things that can truly create value.
The threshold for smart money to choose projects is just two: first, it must have scarcity; second, it must be able to truly land, ideally both at the same time. Take ASTER as an example—it meets both criteria. One is the Burndrop plan—continuously buying back and destroying tokens through profits, reducing circulation, which is a real deflationary support. The other is the partnership with SBI Holdings to launch a Japanese yen stablecoin. What does this mean? It means opening up real application scenarios in traditional finance, no longer just an air castle.
"Reduce supply, expand demand"—this combination is actually rare in the current market. The bottom of the market is often a good opportunity for layout, but the prerequisite is that you can distinguish between genuine and fake projects. Those projects that only boast but lack real business support will only die faster in downturns.