# Rebound的所有文章

在 HTX 新聞中心流覽與「Rebound」相關的最新資訊與深度分析。潘蓋市場趨勢、專案動態、技術進展及監管政策,提供權威的加密行業洞察。

Is the Rebound an Illusion? The Bond Market Has Already Given the Answer

Is the stock market's rapid rebound to pre-war levels a sign of recovery or a misleading rally driven by momentum rather than fundamentals? While the S&P 500 has fully recovered its losses from the U.S.-Iran conflict and nears all-time highs, bond and oil markets tell a different story. Key data reveals contradictions: 10-year Treasury yields have risen 30 basis points, signaling persistent inflation concerns and constrained Fed policy space. WTI crude is up 37%, indicating that geopolitical risks are not priced to resolve soon. The 2-year Treasury yield, a sensitive gauge of rate expectations, has increased nearly 40 bps, challenging the narrative of imminent Fed rate cuts. The equity market appears to be pricing in a "perfect scenario": subdued oil impact on consumption, Fed rate cuts despite hot inflation, stable corporate margins, and near-term conflict resolution. However, bonds and oil reflect a reality of sticky inflation, limited Fed flexibility, and ongoing geopolitical tension. This divergence suggests the rally may be momentum-driven rather than fundamentally justified. If upcoming CPI data exceeds expectations (e.g., above 3.5%), the 2026 rate-cut narrative could collapse. Investors chasing the rally are betting on an ideal outcome—swift conflict resolution, controlled inflation, Fed easing, and resilient earnings—while ignoring signals from more cautious asset classes. The gap will likely close either through a fundamental improvement validating stocks or a market correction aligning with bond and oil realities.

marsbit4 小時前

Is the Rebound an Illusion? The Bond Market Has Already Given the Answer

marsbit4 小時前

How is the 'Bottom Structure' of a Bear Market Formed, and Where Are We Now?

This article analyzes the formation of Bitcoin's bear market "bottom structure" by examining the relationship between cost basis and price action, particularly the behavior of short-term holders (STH). Historically, the cost basis of coins held for 1-3 months (1-3m_RP) has acted as a key resistance level during bear market rallies. This group's supply is often less committed; many entered the market expecting quick gains but were trapped. When the price rebounds to their break-even point, they tend to sell, creating resistance. Data shows that as of mid-April, the 1-3m_RP is approximately $75,400, a level Bitcoin is currently testing for the second time this cycle. The first test in mid-January failed, leading to a pullback. The author suggests a high probability of a similar outcome this time, as historical cycles show the second test rarely results in an immediate reversal. An alternative, less likely scenario is a break above this level, only to face stronger resistance at the broader STH-RP (average cost basis for all short-term holders) near $81,000, where a much larger supply of 2.31 million BTC resides. This could lead to price consolidation around the 1-3m_RP. A definitive bottom structure is confirmed only when the 1-3m_RP trend reverses from down to up, signaling a transition from a bear to a bull market. This process takes time, requiring patience to observe whether breakouts are genuine.

marsbit5 小時前

How is the 'Bottom Structure' of a Bear Market Formed, and Where Are We Now?

marsbit5 小時前

Short-Term Rebound or Bull Market Return? What Do Traders Think?

The S&P 500 has rebounded nearly 10% from its March 27 low, with the Nasdaq posting a 10-day winning streak—its longest since 2021. Bitcoin surged past $76,000, and crypto-related stocks rallied. The market is showing a V-shaped recovery, but the question remains: is this a true bull market return or just a short-term rebound? Bullish analysts, including Tom Lee and Ed Yardeni, argue the bottom is in. Lee cites the U.S.-Iran ceasefire as a key factor, while Yardeni maintains a year-end S&P 500 target of 7700, stating "pessimism is now out of style." Goldman Sachs labels this a "marathon expansion," expecting a 12% earnings growth to form a "fundamental bottom," with AI driving nearly 40% of S&P 500 earnings growth. Morgan Stanley notes that bull markets in their fourth year historically deliver positive returns, with AI-driven productivity gains yet to fully diffuse. Bearish voices, led by Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett, caution that true market lows require extreme pessimism, which is absent now. Cash levels are low at 4.3%, and institutional investors remain overweight on stocks. Hartnett warns that oil’s 60% rise since the Iran war could hurt profits more than inflation data suggests. Goldman’s trading desk also views the rally as a technical rebound, not a trend, pending real-world oil shipping data from the Strait of Hormuz. Piper Sandler’s Michael Kantrowitz has stopped issuing year-end targets due to high uncertainty. The divide is clear: bulls see a fundamentals-driven bull run with earnings growth and geopolitical de-escalation, while bears see a sentiment-driven bounce with weak inflows—equity funds saw $15.4 billion in outflows last week. The key variable is the U.S.-Iran talks; a ceasefire extension could solidify the rally, but failure may trigger a drop. As Hartnett warns, "investors should not mistake a relief rally for a solution."

marsbit昨天 07:48

Short-Term Rebound or Bull Market Return? What Do Traders Think?

marsbit昨天 07:48

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