Rate cuts? That’s just surface-level stuff. What’s really worth paying attention to is that the Fed might be about to turn the “liquidity tap” back on.



On December 1, the Fed officially hit the “pause button” on quantitative tightening. Now, bank reserves have dropped to a dangerous level—overnight lending rates are spiking at the slightest trigger, indicating that there’s not enough money in the system. The market is starting to suffocate.

So for this meeting, the 25 basis point rate cut isn’t the main focus. Everyone is waiting to see if Powell will announce a new plan: injecting more liquidity into the system. The technical term is “reserve management purchases”—in plain English, it’s a slow-motion version of quantitative easing.

Some former Fed insiders predict this plan could launch as early as January next year. Buying $35–45 billion in short-term Treasuries each month, and over a year, that’s more than $400 billion in new liquidity. That’s no small amount.

For the crypto market? This is a bombshell signal.

Over the past few years, Bitcoin’s price has been highly correlated with the Fed’s “liquidity level.” It falls when liquidity is drained and rises when liquidity is added. If the trend really is about to reverse—from “tightening” to “easing”—that means the market’s fundamentals are shifting. When liquidity returns, where does the money flow first? History has already given us the answer.

So what should you do now?

Don’t get scared off by short-term volatility. On-chain data shows lots of people are selling at a loss—which is often the last shakeout before a big move. If the Fed does confirm a liquidity injection, the money will flow first into the assets most sensitive to liquidity.

If you’re holding positions, stay steady. If you want to get in, you can start building positions in batches. The market hasn’t fully reacted yet—this could be a window of opportunity.

Of course, there’s always risk. But direction matters more than speed, and catching the right rhythm matters more than following the right crowd.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 14h ago
Here comes another round of liquidity talk—let's check the on-chain data first. --- $400 billion sounds exciting, but we need to see if the Fed actually acts or is just bluffing again. --- Everyone entering now is betting on Powell—if you bet on the wrong person, it's over. --- Lack of liquidity is real, but the coin is still the same coin—don't over-interpret it. --- I'm tired of hearing about "shakeouts." Every bottom they say it's a shakeout, but then it keeps dropping. --- Will BTC really be the first to benefit when liquidity returns? I doubt it. The stock and bond markets might recover first. --- Averaging in, huh? Just another way for us to be the bag holders. --- Saying Bitcoin is highly correlated with the Fed is way too absolute—it ignores too many variables. --- Let's wait until January to see. Anything said now is just empty talk; data is what matters. --- Is this truly an opportunity or just another round of retail getting fleeced? Time will tell. --- If you don't have any chips, stop agonizing. The most important thing is to stick to your own plan.
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ShibaOnTheRunvip
· 14h ago
Liquidity injection is coming, and this time it really is different. Those selling at a loss are giving us the perfect opportunity to get in; history always repeats itself like this. But wait, will it really start in January? I feel like we still need to see what Powell says. I think when liquidity returns, Bitcoin will definitely be the first to take off—that's a given. Holding my position tight, now let's see how things play out.
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ser_ngmivip
· 14h ago
Bitcoin sensed the money printing long ago. Wait, $400 billion a year? Now this is getting interesting. Those who ran at a loss really left early. Hold tight, this time it's different.
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AirdropHuntressvip
· 14h ago
A $400 billion liquidity injection—those numbers are definitely eye-catching. But the key is to look at the actual implementation timeline. Historical data shows that liquidity expectations often start to take effect 3-6 months before the funds actually arrive. The question now is—will this be another "PPT version" of quantitative easing, or is it for real this time? If you're holding spot assets, there's not much of an issue—it's just the worry that this could be another prelude to capital-driven profit-taking at the expense of retail investors.
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