The thesis behind $FMKT is straightforward: as regulatory headwinds ease, companies gain newfound flexibility and strategic optionality—opportunities that markets typically fail to price in accurately. When policy shifts create room for maneuver, those positioned early often see disproportionate upside. The market tends to lag behind regulatory reality, leaving room for discerning investors to capitalize on the mismatch between onchain possibilities and current valuations.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 01-15 09:00
tbh the regulatory arbitrage angle here is where most retail stays asleep... mismatch between on-chain reality and legacy pricing models always gets corrected, just question is timing and who positioned early. $FMKT thesis checks out if you're actually tracking policy velocity not headlines
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0xLostKey
· 01-14 23:52
Relaxed regulation = getting in early, this logic makes sense, it all depends on who can buy the dip accurately. Those who entered early indeed earn more, while those who come later just watch their investments gather dust. Do you agree?
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GateUser-a5fa8bd0
· 01-14 23:52
Relaxation of regulations is indeed a value hotspot; the issue is how retail investors can judge the timing... Early investors made a lot of profit, but there are also quite a few later entrants taking over.
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StablecoinEnjoyer
· 01-14 23:50
A regulatory easing is a signal to get on board. Those who entered early in this wave have indeed benefited from the dividends. But to be honest, how long can this mismatch opportunity last?
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digital_archaeologist
· 01-14 23:45
Once regulation loosens, companies take off. I've heard this logic too many times. The real question is whether retail investors can truly outperform market pricing...
The thesis behind $FMKT is straightforward: as regulatory headwinds ease, companies gain newfound flexibility and strategic optionality—opportunities that markets typically fail to price in accurately. When policy shifts create room for maneuver, those positioned early often see disproportionate upside. The market tends to lag behind regulatory reality, leaving room for discerning investors to capitalize on the mismatch between onchain possibilities and current valuations.