๐‘๐ˆ๐’๐ˆ๐๐† ๐˜๐ˆ๐„๐‹๐ƒ๐’ ๐ƒ๐Ž๐โ€™๐“ ๐€๐‹๐–๐€๐˜๐’ ๐Œ๐„๐€๐ ๐๐„๐€๐‘๐ˆ๐’๐‡ ๐…๐Ž๐‘ ๐๐ˆ๐“๐‚๐Ž๐ˆ๐



๐Ÿ“Š Many traders are becoming worried as bond yields continue climbing and inflation concerns return.

But history suggests something interesting:

Rising yields have often appeared during Bitcoin's strongest expansion phases.

The historical pattern looks like this:

1โƒฃ U.S. 10-Year Yield bottoms
2โƒฃ ISM Manufacturing bottoms
3โƒฃ Economic activity begins improving
4โƒฃ Bitcoin enters bullish expansion

Looking back:

โ–ซ๏ธ 2023โ€“2024 โ†’ Yields moved from ~3% to ~5%
โ–ซ๏ธ Bitcoin continued higher despite rising rates
โ–ซ๏ธ Previous cycles showed similar behavior

Why?

Because moderate reflation often signals:
โ–ซ๏ธ Improving economic activity
โ–ซ๏ธ Expanding liquidity expectations
โ–ซ๏ธ Higher risk appetite
โ–ซ๏ธ Stronger market participation

However, there is an important warning.

โš ๏ธ Some inflation can help.

Too much inflation becomes a problem.

Historically, yields moving above extreme levels can begin creating pressure on risk assets.

Assets reacting closely:

โ–ซ๏ธ $BTC
โ–ซ๏ธ $ETH
โ–ซ๏ธ $SPX

๐Ÿ”ถ ๐“๐‘๐€๐ƒ๐ˆ๐๐† ๐‡๐„๐ˆ๐†๐‡๐“๐’โ„ข ๐•๐„๐‘๐ƒ๐ˆ๐‚๐“

Not every rising-yield environment is bearish.

The key question isn't whether yields are rising.

The question is how far they rise.

#GateSquareMayTradingShare
BTC-1.03%
ETH-1.74%
SPX-0.78%
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