Global stocks, precious metals, real estate, and bonds are all soaring simultaneously, seemingly unstoppable, but everyone can sense that the underlying structural risks have not disappeared. For the past thirty years, we have been accustomed to explaining this phenomenon with terms like "bull market" or "bubble," but what truly influences the subsequent direction is not the rise or fall of prices, but how value is settled and who bears the costs.
Between late 2024 and early 2025, I was almost obsessively writing about the necessity of diversified asset allocation. At that time, few people paid attention. As a result, just one year later, the structural risks of diversified assets have far exceeded expectations—the risk transmission effects caused by a large number of assets sharply rising are beyond estimation. Meanwhile, a new asset rights system centered around blockchain is quietly taking shape.
Cryptocurrencies face a real issue in this era: they are no longer purely speculative tools but a choice of financial infrastructure.
**Value Logic Is Splitting**
In the early stages of Bitcoin and Ethereum, the value of cryptocurrencies was mainly driven by narratives and market sentiment—who believes first, who might make a fortune.
But in a time when global assets are rising together and inflation is institutionally acknowledged, simple narratives are already diminishing in marginal impact. Price increases do not equal value recognition. True value depends on whether on-chain assets can perform actual clearing, settlement, and credit functions.
The core change is this: when inflation no longer depends on traditional banking and debt systems for distribution, but instead flows through on-chain assets, stablecoins, and RWA (real-world asset tokenization), the entire value framework of cryptocurrencies is rewritten.
It has transformed from a mere trading commodity into the infrastructure for payments and settlements. This is the real turning point.
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SnapshotDayLaborer
· 01-14 17:46
The risk stacking is really hard to see clearly now. Anyway, I'm just holding onto BTC and ETH without letting go.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 01-13 14:04
Settlement rights are the core; price fluctuations are really not that important.
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Wait, does that mean RWA has really become the mainstream choice now?
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Rising across multiple assets is actually more dangerous; who will take the final step?
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The on-chain clearing system should have been established long ago; traditional finance is still hesitating.
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The narrative should step back; the hard power has arrived.
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Well said, but most people are still trading based on price; how long will it take to truly understand this logic?
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Can the combination of RWA and stablecoins truly replace debt distribution, or does it just diversify risk?
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The fundamental risk remains because everyone is still bearing inflation; blockchain can't change this reality.
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From speculative assets to infrastructure, this transition has just begun.
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The concept of value logic bifurcation is brilliant, but the problem is that most retail investors haven't kept up with the pace.
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quietly_staking
· 01-13 07:53
Alright, no problem, settlement rights are the core
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This wave of global price increases is indeed strange; risk transmission is completely unpredictable
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On-chain settlement rights are comparable to traditional finance; the track has shifted
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Stablecoins are the real infrastructure competition; it hasn't really started yet
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Price increases don't mean it's valuable; keep this in mind
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The logic behind RWA is coherent, but on-chain execution is still far from enough
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Narrative decay is real; now it's about seeing who can truly meet the settlement needs
View OriginalReply0
WalletDetective
· 01-13 00:53
Well said, on-chain settlement is the true game rule rewrite.
View OriginalReply0
GasGuzzler
· 01-13 00:51
There's nothing wrong with that; the traditional financial system should have been phased out long ago.
RWA is indeed the future; stablecoins are the real infrastructure.
Anyone still hyping narratives deserves to take a loss.
View OriginalReply0
OnchainSniper
· 01-13 00:48
That's right, everyone is now talking about diversified allocation, but the real risks are still hard to see clearly. I believe on-chain settlement is truly happening, and the traditional methods will eventually have to accept this reality.
View OriginalReply0
DAOplomacy
· 01-13 00:47
honestly the "who bears the cost" framing hits different when you realize most people still don't get how rwa actually settles risk... like we're all just waiting for the infrastructure layer to mature before things get genuinely weird, ngl
Reply0
PumpingCroissant
· 01-13 00:43
That's right, everyone is waiting to see who will fall first.
Global stocks, precious metals, real estate, and bonds are all soaring simultaneously, seemingly unstoppable, but everyone can sense that the underlying structural risks have not disappeared. For the past thirty years, we have been accustomed to explaining this phenomenon with terms like "bull market" or "bubble," but what truly influences the subsequent direction is not the rise or fall of prices, but how value is settled and who bears the costs.
Between late 2024 and early 2025, I was almost obsessively writing about the necessity of diversified asset allocation. At that time, few people paid attention. As a result, just one year later, the structural risks of diversified assets have far exceeded expectations—the risk transmission effects caused by a large number of assets sharply rising are beyond estimation. Meanwhile, a new asset rights system centered around blockchain is quietly taking shape.
Cryptocurrencies face a real issue in this era: they are no longer purely speculative tools but a choice of financial infrastructure.
**Value Logic Is Splitting**
In the early stages of Bitcoin and Ethereum, the value of cryptocurrencies was mainly driven by narratives and market sentiment—who believes first, who might make a fortune.
But in a time when global assets are rising together and inflation is institutionally acknowledged, simple narratives are already diminishing in marginal impact. Price increases do not equal value recognition. True value depends on whether on-chain assets can perform actual clearing, settlement, and credit functions.
The core change is this: when inflation no longer depends on traditional banking and debt systems for distribution, but instead flows through on-chain assets, stablecoins, and RWA (real-world asset tokenization), the entire value framework of cryptocurrencies is rewritten.
It has transformed from a mere trading commodity into the infrastructure for payments and settlements. This is the real turning point.