$SHIB
I think calling the tops is as necessary as making early at launch calls. I literally called top of the meme market in May, top in early November and bottom in late January.
I’m also calling this top at the end of February, enjoy these pumps but I think is just a bounce on entire altcoin/meme market
I think calling the tops is as necessary as making early at launch calls. I literally called top of the meme market in May, top in early November and bottom in late January.
I’m also calling this top at the end of February, enjoy these pumps but I think is just a bounce on entire altcoin/meme market
CPI over expetection , 7.5%.
As said many times, we can hear any opinion, but the steps to be taken will be
-QE reduction
-rate hike and then QT from May.
There is no other solution, for this reason that I am so cautious and i think we will see new Lows sooner or later.
https://twitter.com/livesquawk/status/1491766603234652166?s=21
As said many times, we can hear any opinion, but the steps to be taken will be
-QE reduction
-rate hike and then QT from May.
There is no other solution, for this reason that I am so cautious and i think we will see new Lows sooner or later.
https://twitter.com/livesquawk/status/1491766603234652166?s=21
Twitter
LiveSquawk
US CPI (M/M) Jan: 0.6% (est 0.4%; prevR 0.6%) - CPI (Y/Y) Jan: 7.5% (est 7.3%; prev 7.0%) - Core CPI (M/M) Jan: 0.6% (est 0.5%; prev 0.6%) - Core CPI (Y/Y) Jan: 6.0% (est 5.9%; prev 5.5%)
Noodles 2025 Market Intelligence Event
https://twitter.com/criptopaul/status/1481981319274016773?s=12
$SHIB
#shiba plan and what i was expecting from entire altcoin market.
-Bounce in february ✅
-continuation of the bearish trend from March / end of February
-New lows
#shiba plan and what i was expecting from entire altcoin market.
-Bounce in february ✅
-continuation of the bearish trend from March / end of February
-New lows
Noodles 2025 Market Intelligence Event
Photo
We are approaching March and as expected the market begins to collapse after the second week of February, also due to the Ukraine-Russia situation.
What could be the economic implications?
In the first, the Russians invade, or at least cross over to Ukraine. The news will of course scare the markets, which in any case expect it.
Nothing good, also because this time the central banks will not intervene to help investors, but will remain focused on fighting inflation. No additional liquidity, therefore.
If, on the other hand, the attack does not happen, that is, if the Russians and the Americans sit around a table looking for an agreement, then the markets will go up.
Furthermore, in March, the Fed has already said that it will raise rates and therefore reduce the liquidity it will put on the markets. The markets take this for granted, but how will it do it? Markets are pricing in at least six to seven rate hikes between now and the end of the year, for a total of around 1.75%.
The US central bank has understood that if it raises rates too much and does it too quickly, it will end up frightening the markets and setting the yield curve to zero, that is, it risks making short-term rates rise more than long-term ones. which for the markets would represent a sign of recession.
In this way, the Fed will try to raise rates without frightening the markets and, above all, accustoming them to live with less liquidity. This will not appeal to the markets but somehow it has to be done. There is no doubt that in the last few decades the markets have been spoiled: they have received rivers of liquidity at very low prices, specially in post-pandemic phase as we have seen from March 2020 to November 2021..
What could be the economic implications?
In the first, the Russians invade, or at least cross over to Ukraine. The news will of course scare the markets, which in any case expect it.
Nothing good, also because this time the central banks will not intervene to help investors, but will remain focused on fighting inflation. No additional liquidity, therefore.
If, on the other hand, the attack does not happen, that is, if the Russians and the Americans sit around a table looking for an agreement, then the markets will go up.
Furthermore, in March, the Fed has already said that it will raise rates and therefore reduce the liquidity it will put on the markets. The markets take this for granted, but how will it do it? Markets are pricing in at least six to seven rate hikes between now and the end of the year, for a total of around 1.75%.
The US central bank has understood that if it raises rates too much and does it too quickly, it will end up frightening the markets and setting the yield curve to zero, that is, it risks making short-term rates rise more than long-term ones. which for the markets would represent a sign of recession.
In this way, the Fed will try to raise rates without frightening the markets and, above all, accustoming them to live with less liquidity. This will not appeal to the markets but somehow it has to be done. There is no doubt that in the last few decades the markets have been spoiled: they have received rivers of liquidity at very low prices, specially in post-pandemic phase as we have seen from March 2020 to November 2021..
People who are expecting a continuation of the bull run or a new altseason are either crazy or simply don't know the basics of economics and are misinformed.
Noodles 2025 Market Intelligence Event
Photo
This was the chart but changing in dark mode cause my view starts to drop.
#BTC we had fake breakout as expected where people get fomo above 44,5k