According to Mars Finance, Bitcoin has maintained stability after a slight rebound, with the current recovery leaning more towards improved risk sentiment rather than being driven by the internal dynamics of the encryption zone. The stock market has seen a slight increase, with the market anticipating an approximately 85% chance of a rate cut in December. However, high inflation and weak employment data continue to weigh on the market, with Fed officials expressing a slightly dovish stance, but with limited intensity. This week's macro focus will shift to unemployment benefit claims and ADP employment data. Meanwhile, the credit spreads and CDS related to AI continue to rise, indicating that funds are reassessing the strongest trading logic of the past year. The funding situation remains weak, with continued outflows from crypto ETFs and net liquidations of asset products, with several net values falling below 1 USD per unit, significantly increasing risk aversion sentiment. Strategy has once again taken center stage in public opinion due to Bitcoin reserves approaching breakeven and stock prices being included in the MSCI delisting watchlist, which could become a key variable in the market before the end of the year. Currently, the correlation between BTC and AI tech stocks has increased, while the fear and greed index has retreated, indicating limited short-term emotional recovery. In terms of options structure, the demand for put protection remains strong, although open interest leans towards bullish, implied volatility and positions have both declined, and positions are beginning to lighten. If there is a rebound to around 95,000 USDT, it may face selling pressure from ETF redemptions, continuing the range-bound logic; the main support area is between 80,000–82,000 USD, and a break below this could trigger systemic stop loss liquidity. Michael Saylor has once again released the BTC Tracker. Historically, Strategy tends to disclose increased holdings the day after this signal appears, forming a clear communication pattern: first signal the sell, then announce the purchase, shaping continued bullish expectations and capital entry. 4E reminds investors: the short-term BTC trend is still driven by macro expectations, capital flows, and the resonance of options structures, with the rebound mostly coming from external risk preferences rather than improvements in on-chain fundamentals. The bottom still requires confirmation from funds, and a warming sentiment needs to look at ETF flows and Strategy dynamics, suggesting close attention to this week's employment data and spot liquidity performance.
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4E: Bitcoin stabilizes and rebounds, macro expectations and capital flows still dominate the direction.
According to Mars Finance, Bitcoin has maintained stability after a slight rebound, with the current recovery leaning more towards improved risk sentiment rather than being driven by the internal dynamics of the encryption zone. The stock market has seen a slight increase, with the market anticipating an approximately 85% chance of a rate cut in December. However, high inflation and weak employment data continue to weigh on the market, with Fed officials expressing a slightly dovish stance, but with limited intensity. This week's macro focus will shift to unemployment benefit claims and ADP employment data. Meanwhile, the credit spreads and CDS related to AI continue to rise, indicating that funds are reassessing the strongest trading logic of the past year. The funding situation remains weak, with continued outflows from crypto ETFs and net liquidations of asset products, with several net values falling below 1 USD per unit, significantly increasing risk aversion sentiment. Strategy has once again taken center stage in public opinion due to Bitcoin reserves approaching breakeven and stock prices being included in the MSCI delisting watchlist, which could become a key variable in the market before the end of the year. Currently, the correlation between BTC and AI tech stocks has increased, while the fear and greed index has retreated, indicating limited short-term emotional recovery. In terms of options structure, the demand for put protection remains strong, although open interest leans towards bullish, implied volatility and positions have both declined, and positions are beginning to lighten. If there is a rebound to around 95,000 USDT, it may face selling pressure from ETF redemptions, continuing the range-bound logic; the main support area is between 80,000–82,000 USD, and a break below this could trigger systemic stop loss liquidity. Michael Saylor has once again released the BTC Tracker. Historically, Strategy tends to disclose increased holdings the day after this signal appears, forming a clear communication pattern: first signal the sell, then announce the purchase, shaping continued bullish expectations and capital entry. 4E reminds investors: the short-term BTC trend is still driven by macro expectations, capital flows, and the resonance of options structures, with the rebound mostly coming from external risk preferences rather than improvements in on-chain fundamentals. The bottom still requires confirmation from funds, and a warming sentiment needs to look at ETF flows and Strategy dynamics, suggesting close attention to this week's employment data and spot liquidity performance.