The Federal Reserve's year-end "blood transfusion", $6.8 billion just arrived! In 10 days, a crazy release of $38 billion in liquidity, is this a regular operation or the prelude to a bull market?
What just happened - The Federal Reserve is set to inject 6.8 billion dollars into the market through repurchase agreements at 10 PM tonight. This marks a consecutive operation over the past ten days, with a cumulative scale approaching 38 billion dollars.
This approach is actually quite familiar. Every year at the end of the year, banking institutions face cash tightness issues and fear soaring market interest rates. The Federal Reserve plays the role of a "liquidity provider," lending cash to banks in exchange for Treasury bonds as collateral, which are then reclaimed a few days later. The official term is "conventional liquidity management," and industry insiders see right through it.
The question is, the market is reacting very enthusiastically. Many experienced traders are starting to ponder - will this money indirectly flow into the cryptocurrency sector?
The logic is actually not complicated: although the money directly injected by the Federal Reserve has entered the banking system, the overall liquidity pool of the market has expanded. When the banking system is loose, market sentiment follows suit. Some institutional funds are always looking for higher yield breakthroughs; in recent years, the focus has been on the stock market, but now... the crypto market is different. Don’t forget that the spot BTC ETF has already been approved, and what traditional institutions lack is the excuse to enter the market. This wave of "year-end liquidity injection" has, to some extent, provided a psychological signal for large funds to enter.
But don't overinterpret it. This $38 billion is just a drop in the bucket compared to the Federal Reserve's trillion-dollar asset scale. There may be a temporary boost in sentiment, but it's too early to conclude that this has started a "liquidity cycle" for the crypto bull market.
What do you think? The core purpose of the Federal Reserve's ongoing liquidity release this time is to rescue traditional finance, or has it inadvertently "handed weapons" to the digital asset market?
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 2025-12-25 05:13
38 billion drizzles? That's just fooling yourself too much. No matter how deep the tricks are, they can't hide the essence of flooding.
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WalletWhisperer
· 2025-12-24 21:39
watching the wallet clustering patterns spike rn... 380B injection doesn't move the needle on fed balance sheet but the behavioral indicators? *chef's kiss* institutional money's been accumulating in staging zones for weeks. this is just the statistical confirmation they needed to pull the trigger. market's reading the tea leaves perfectly.
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GasFeeWhisperer
· 2025-12-22 14:04
Looking at this 38 billion makes me laugh, do you really think retail investors can get a share?
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It's that time of year again, the banks take a breath and say a bull run is coming, wake up everyone.
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The spot BTC ETF has passed, and the institutions are still using this lame excuse? I think it's just creating anxiety through public opinion.
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A light drizzle is indeed a light drizzle, but don't underestimate the funds' ability to find a way out; they might really flow in.
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Instead of focusing on the Fed's money, why not check what the institutions' actual holdings are doing?
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38 billion is just toilet paper for the Fed, but for us, it's annual income; this gap is truly ironic.
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Is regular operation being used as a signal to buy? This mentality is more dangerous than losing money.
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ZEC, a privacy coin, is specifically mentioned; it seems there's an information gap.
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Liquidity easing ≠ flowing into encryption; this logic is too forced, the Fed isn't stupid.
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End-of-year point shaving is like giving year-end bonuses; the surface joy hides a numerical game.
View OriginalReply0
0xTherapist
· 2025-12-22 06:41
38 billion dollars sounds like a lot, but how much will really be left in encryption?
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AirdropHarvester
· 2025-12-22 06:40
Haha, here it comes again. The annual must-see year-end drama. When banks are short on cash, the Fed engages in point shaving. This trap has long been played out.
But this time it's different. Once the Spot BTC ETF passes, traditional big players will be looking for excuses to enter the market. This 38 billion might just be their psychological hint.
Just wait and see. In the short term, it could just be emotional speculation. Don't get played for suckers.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainArchaeologist
· 2025-12-22 06:29
38 billion sounds impressive, but it's just the usual year-end operations, don't be misled by the hype.
View OriginalReply0
Gm_Gn_Merchant
· 2025-12-22 06:26
buy the dip signal? I have my eyes closed.
View OriginalReply0
GweiTooHigh
· 2025-12-22 06:26
Wait, is 38 billion really just a drop in the bucket? Why do I feel like I've been played people for suckers?
View OriginalReply0
Crypto_Buzz_with_Alex
· 2025-12-22 06:19
😎 “Crypto community energy is unmatched 🔥”
Reply0
quiet_lurker
· 2025-12-22 06:17
Another trap again? It's the old trick of injecting funds at the end of the year, and they really have managed to fool themselves.
#数字资产市场洞察 $BTC $ETH $ZEC
The Federal Reserve's year-end "blood transfusion", $6.8 billion just arrived! In 10 days, a crazy release of $38 billion in liquidity, is this a regular operation or the prelude to a bull market?
What just happened - The Federal Reserve is set to inject 6.8 billion dollars into the market through repurchase agreements at 10 PM tonight. This marks a consecutive operation over the past ten days, with a cumulative scale approaching 38 billion dollars.
This approach is actually quite familiar. Every year at the end of the year, banking institutions face cash tightness issues and fear soaring market interest rates. The Federal Reserve plays the role of a "liquidity provider," lending cash to banks in exchange for Treasury bonds as collateral, which are then reclaimed a few days later. The official term is "conventional liquidity management," and industry insiders see right through it.
The question is, the market is reacting very enthusiastically. Many experienced traders are starting to ponder - will this money indirectly flow into the cryptocurrency sector?
The logic is actually not complicated: although the money directly injected by the Federal Reserve has entered the banking system, the overall liquidity pool of the market has expanded. When the banking system is loose, market sentiment follows suit. Some institutional funds are always looking for higher yield breakthroughs; in recent years, the focus has been on the stock market, but now... the crypto market is different. Don’t forget that the spot BTC ETF has already been approved, and what traditional institutions lack is the excuse to enter the market. This wave of "year-end liquidity injection" has, to some extent, provided a psychological signal for large funds to enter.
But don't overinterpret it. This $38 billion is just a drop in the bucket compared to the Federal Reserve's trillion-dollar asset scale. There may be a temporary boost in sentiment, but it's too early to conclude that this has started a "liquidity cycle" for the crypto bull market.
What do you think? The core purpose of the Federal Reserve's ongoing liquidity release this time is to rescue traditional finance, or has it inadvertently "handed weapons" to the digital asset market?