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The global market is experiencing an invisible transfer of capital. The latest statement from the Bank of Japan has sparked market attention: the governor explicitly stated that rate hikes are difficult to stop, and the two-year government bond auction was cold, with yields reaching a 27-year high. This signal is very clear—the thirty-year era of low Japanese interest rates has come to an end, and a large amount of funds financed in yen for global investments are accelerating their withdrawal.
Interestingly, while retail investors are still worried about bond fluctuations, Wall Street is moving much faster. Top institutions like BlackRock have recently increased their holdings of Bitcoin and Ethereum frequently, with daily increases reaching tens of millions of dollars. As of now, the total holdings of mainstream institutions in the crypto space have approached $80 billion—this is no coincidence.
The logic behind this is simple: the Bank of Japan is caught in a dilemma—fighting inflation on one side and facing selling pressure on government bonds on the other, which will create sustained expectations of rate hikes. When liquidity expectations in the old financial system shift, institutions will proactively allocate to new asset classes. As a representative of the new monetary paradigm, the crypto market is attracting increasing large-scale capital.
The dividing line in history seems to have been drawn. On one side is the traditional system caught in the "rate hike-debt deterioration" cycle, and on the other side are institutions continuously increasing their positions in crypto. The next phase of liquidity movement will likely determine the market direction. The performance of BTC and ETH will be the most direct reflection of this transition.
What do you think about this wave of capital flow changes?