There are two key interest rate decisions in December, with completely opposite directions, which is quite subtle.
First, the Federal Reserve. At the meeting on December 10, a rate cut is almost a foregone conclusion—the FedWatch tool shows the probability of a cut is stable above 85%. Normally, a rate cut means more liquidity flows into the market, which should be bullish.
But the Bank of Japan is different. On December 19, they are very likely to raise rates, and the governor has already hinted at it. Here’s the problem: if the yen raises rates, what will happen to those carry trades? Funds will withdraw, selling pressure will mount, and the market will be under pressure.
These two forces are pulling against each other. Under normal circumstances, the momentum from a Fed rate cut should outweigh the resistance from a BOJ rate hike. But you know how the current market environment is—good news often doesn’t work, and bad news hits especially hard. So I tend to think that the negative impact from the yen rate hike will be more pronounced. Once things settle after December 19, there’s a good chance the crypto market will continue to pull back.
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EyeOfTheTokenStorm
· 23h ago
Hmm... I do feel that this round of yen rate hikes will definitely crash the market. Once the arbitrage positions are withdrawn, everything will fall apart. The Fed's minor rate cuts simply can't hold it up, and historical data is just that brutal.
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BrokenDAO
· 23h ago
This logic sounds flawless, but it overlooks a key point—the market has never been a linear game of equilibrium and is often driven by sentiment when it comes to pricing. The Fed cutting rates may seem bullish, but once expectations of a yen rate hike are anchored, the entire trading chain flips, and capital flows get completely recoded. To put it plainly, the current market has long entered a state of "bad news gets amplified, good news gets discounted" due to incentive distortions.
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IfIWereOnChain
· 23h ago
It's another one of those seesaw markets, I'm totally confused. The Fed is cutting rates, the Bank of Japan is raising them—who the heck is actually calling the shots?
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JustHereForMemes
· 23h ago
That wave of yen rate hikes could really bring things down, and the benefits of the Fed's rate cuts might be overshadowed.
There are two key interest rate decisions in December, with completely opposite directions, which is quite subtle.
First, the Federal Reserve. At the meeting on December 10, a rate cut is almost a foregone conclusion—the FedWatch tool shows the probability of a cut is stable above 85%. Normally, a rate cut means more liquidity flows into the market, which should be bullish.
But the Bank of Japan is different. On December 19, they are very likely to raise rates, and the governor has already hinted at it. Here’s the problem: if the yen raises rates, what will happen to those carry trades? Funds will withdraw, selling pressure will mount, and the market will be under pressure.
These two forces are pulling against each other. Under normal circumstances, the momentum from a Fed rate cut should outweigh the resistance from a BOJ rate hike. But you know how the current market environment is—good news often doesn’t work, and bad news hits especially hard. So I tend to think that the negative impact from the yen rate hike will be more pronounced. Once things settle after December 19, there’s a good chance the crypto market will continue to pull back.
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