🎉 Gate Square — Share Your Funniest Crypto Moments & Win a $100 Joy Fund!
Crypto can be stressful, so let’s laugh it out on Gate Square.
Whether it’s a liquidation tragedy, FOMO madness, or a hilarious miss—you name it.
Post your funniest crypto moment and win your share of the Joy Fund!
💰 Rewards
10 creators with the funniest posts
Each will receive $10 in tokens
📝 How to Join
1⃣️ Follow Gate_Square
2⃣️ Post with the hashtag #MyCryptoFunnyMoment
3⃣️ Any format works: memes, screenshots, short videos, personal stories, fails, chaos—bring it on.
📌 Notes
Hashtag #MyCryptoFunnyMoment is requi
Analyzing the current macroeconomy: AI is the only engine driving the economy, and the market is driven by emotions and capital flows.
Author: arndxt, encryption KOL
Compiled by: Felix, PANews
The only engine driving GDP now is artificial intelligence, while everything else is on the decline, such as the labor market, family conditions, purchasing power, and asset acquisition ability. Everyone is waiting for the so-called “cycle reversal.” But there is no cycle at all. The fact is:
Do not misjudge this transformation risk and invest funds in the wrong party.
1. Market dynamics are not driven by fundamentals
In the past month, despite no new economic data being released, prices have fluctuated significantly due to the shift in the Federal Reserve's stance.
The probability of interest rate cuts decreased from 80% to 30% and then rose back to 80%, entirely based on the remarks of individual Federal Reserve officials. This aligns with the situation where systemic capital flows in the market exceed subjective macro views.
Here is some evidence regarding microstructures:
Funds targeting volatility mechanically reduce leverage when volatility spikes and increase leverage when volatility declines. These funds do not care about the “economy” because they adjust risk exposure based on one variable: the level of market volatility. When volatility rises, they reduce risk → sell. When volatility falls, they increase risk → buy. This results in automatic selling during market weakness and automatic buying during market strength, thereby amplifying bidirectional fluctuations.
Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs) switch long and short positions at preset trend levels, causing forced capital flows. CTAs follow strict trend rules:
There is no “viewpoint” behind this, just mechanical operation.
Therefore, even if the fundamentals do not change, when a sufficient number of traders set stop-loss orders at the same price at the same time, large-scale and coordinated buying or selling behavior will occur.
These fund flows can sometimes cause the entire index to fluctuate for several consecutive days.
Stock buybacks remain the largest single source of net stock demand. In the stock market, companies buying back their own shares are the largest net buyers, surpassing retail investors, hedge funds, and pension funds. During the open buyback window, companies consistently inject billions of dollars into the market each week.
This caused:
This is why stock prices may still rise even when market sentiment is extremely poor.
VIX curve inversion reflects a short-term hedging imbalance, rather than**“panic”****.** Generally, long-term volatility (3-month VIX) is higher than short-term volatility (1-month VIX). When this situation reverses, meaning the near-month contract price becomes higher, people will perceive that “panic has intensified.”
But today, it is usually caused by the following factors:
This means:
This distinction is crucial because it means that volatility is now driven by trading rather than by market sentiment.
This has led to the current market environment being more sensitive to market sentiment and more reliant on capital flows. Economic data has become a lagging indicator of asset prices, while the Federal Reserve's communication has become a primary trigger for volatility.
Liquidity, positions, and policy tone now drive price discovery more than fundamentals.
2. Artificial intelligence is preventing a full-blown recession
Artificial intelligence has begun to play the role of a macroeconomic stabilizer.
It effectively replaced periodic recruitment, supported corporate profitability, and maintained GDP growth in the context of weak labor fundamentals.
This means that the U.S. economy's dependence on capital spending for artificial intelligence is far greater than policymakers publicly acknowledge.
Regulators and policymakers will inevitably support artificial intelligence capital expenditures through industrial policies, credit expansion, or strategic incentives, as otherwise, an economic recession would occur.
3. Inequality has become a macro constraint factor
Mike Green's analysis (with the poverty line around $130,000 to $150,000) has sparked strong opposition, indicating how widely this issue resonates.
The core fact is:
Inequality will force adjustments in fiscal policy, regulatory stance, and asset market interventions.
Cryptocurrency has become a tool for the population and a means for the younger generation to achieve capital growth.
4. The bottleneck of artificial intelligence lies in energy rather than computing power
Energy will become a new focal topic. Without the corresponding expansion of energy infrastructure, the artificial intelligence economy cannot scale. Discussions around GPUs overlook the larger bottleneck:
Energy is becoming a limiting factor in the development of artificial intelligence.
Energy, especially nuclear energy, natural gas, and grid modernization, will become one of the most influential investment and policy areas in the next decade.
5. Two economies are rising, and the gap is widening
The U.S. economy is diversifying into a capital-driven artificial intelligence industry and labor-intensive traditional industries, with almost no overlap between the two.
The incentive mechanisms of these two systems are becoming increasingly different:
Artificial Intelligence Economy (Scale)
real economy (contraction)
In the next ten years, the most valuable companies will build solutions that can reconcile or leverage these structural differences.
6. Future Outlook
Related Reading: Macroeconomic Report: How Trump, the Federal Reserve, and Trade Triggered the Largest Market Volatility in History