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#特朗普突袭委内瑞拉
Why Does the Crypto Market Always “Get Crushed First, Then Used” Under Geopolitical Shocks
If Trump leads or pushes for an attack on Venezuela, the immediate impact on the crypto market is never positive but a sudden decline in risk appetite. Traditional markets react first: oil prices fluctuate, Latin American assets come under pressure, U.S. Treasuries strengthen, and cryptocurrencies are often categorized as “high-risk assets,” so short-term selling pressure is not surprising.
However, historical experience shows that the crypto market often follows a typical pattern during geopolitical events: first selling off as a risk asset, then re-pricing as a safe haven. Venezuela itself exemplifies this logic—high inflation, capital controls, currency collapse—causing cryptocurrencies to serve as a “non-official store of value” for the long term.
Therefore, these military actions do not truly impact the price’s rise or fall but rather shift the narrative power. When sovereign risk increases and sanctions expectations strengthen, local and regional demand for decentralized assets may actually grow. Short-term traders see volatility, while long-term participants see cryptocurrencies once again validated by their use cases.
Markets may panic, but demand does not disappear; it just manifests in a different way.