From Venezuela to the world, the crypto market is adapting to "normalization of conflicts"
If geopolitical conflicts were a black swan ten years ago, today they are more like a gray rhino. For the crypto market, events related to Venezuela are just a reminder: the world is entering a stage of conflict normalization. In this environment, the role of crypto assets is quietly changing — no longer just highly volatile speculative instruments, but an "alternative system" amid global uncertainty. This does not mean prices only go up and never down, but that their intrinsic value is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. Every military conflict exposes some people to crypto for the first time; every escalation of sanctions prompts some funds to try to bypass traditional channels. Prices can be suppressed by sentiment, but demand logic is accumulating. Therefore, from a long-term perspective, events like Trump's raid on Venezuela are more like a stress test: they examine the crypto market’s ability to adapt amid global turbulence, rather than short-term bullish or bearish wins. What truly matters is not "rise or fall," but that the crypto market is repeatedly being pulled into the main stage by the real world. #特朗普突袭委内瑞拉
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From Venezuela to the world, the crypto market is adapting to "normalization of conflicts"
If geopolitical conflicts were a black swan ten years ago, today they are more like a gray rhino. For the crypto market, events related to Venezuela are just a reminder: the world is entering a stage of conflict normalization.
In this environment, the role of crypto assets is quietly changing — no longer just highly volatile speculative instruments, but an "alternative system" amid global uncertainty. This does not mean prices only go up and never down, but that their intrinsic value is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.
Every military conflict exposes some people to crypto for the first time; every escalation of sanctions prompts some funds to try to bypass traditional channels. Prices can be suppressed by sentiment, but demand logic is accumulating.
Therefore, from a long-term perspective, events like Trump's raid on Venezuela are more like a stress test: they examine the crypto market’s ability to adapt amid global turbulence, rather than short-term bullish or bearish wins.
What truly matters is not "rise or fall," but that the crypto market is repeatedly being pulled into the main stage by the real world. #特朗普突袭委内瑞拉