If You Attack Cryptocurrency, You'll Lose The Election
Bitcoin's surge to $76,000 after Trump's victory sends a clear message to politicians: crypto policies matter at ballot boxes.
Market data backs this claim. Bitcoin gained 6.6% within 24 hours of the election results, pushing its 30-day growth beyond 21%. The cryptocurrency has doubled in value over the past year.
Each U.S. election cycle since 2009 has seen Bitcoin reach new highs. Post-election prices never returned to pre-election levels, proving the market's resilience to political shifts.
The Federal Reserve plans a 0.25% rate cut, with Polymarket showing 97% probability. The 10-year Treasury yield hit 4.48%, a four-month peak, as markets price in potential deficit increases under Trump's policies.
QCP Capital analysts project 1.8 rate cuts this year and three more in 2025, despite Trump's business-friendly approach. The dollar's 1.2% rise to July highs of 105 shows strong economic growth expectations.
China's response to U.S. tariff policies could shift market dynamics. Despite its crypto trading ban, Chinese monetary policy continues to influence Bitcoin prices through global market connections.
Trading patterns reveal institutional investors increasing their crypto holdings, while retail investors show growing interest in blockchain technology. This trend suggests politicians opposing cryptocurrency risk alienating an expanding voter base.
The markets have spoken: cryptocurrency adoption grows despite regulatory challenges. Politicians who oppose this financial innovation might face consequences at future polls.