# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Reflexivity

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Reflexivity", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Retail Investors Are Not the Noise of the Market, But the Main Melody

The article challenges the conventional hierarchy of market difficulty, arguing that retail-driven markets like Crypto and meme stocks, often dismissed as "simple," actually offer higher returns due to their predictable emotional dynamics, not despite them. The author’s key shift was moving from asking "How much expertise does this market require?" to "What determines price in this market?" In retail-dominated markets, price is not set by fundamentals but by collective sentiment. This isn't a flaw but the core mechanism—retailers are not market "noise" but the main driver, creating powerful feedback loops of buying (FOMO) and selling (panic) known as reflexivity. Unlike institutional markets (e.g., U.S. stocks) where valuation models and arbitrage limit moves,散户 markets lack these anchors, allowing emotions to drive massive, predictable cycles: from ignorance and curiosity to FOMO,狂热, panic, and despair. This emotional trajectory is more reliable than forecasting fundamentals. Consequently, these high-volatility markets offer significant opportunities on both the long side (as sentiment turns positive) and the short side (after peak euphoria). The playing field is level; success depends on understanding human psychology, not deep research or insider information. The ultimate insight is to stop seeking "value" and start following the predictable certainty of crowd sentiment.

marsbit02/02 06:38

Retail Investors Are Not the Noise of the Market, But the Main Melody

marsbit02/02 06:38

Scrolling Through Crypto Twitter, But No More Profit Opportunities

The article "Scrolling Through Crypto Twitter, But No More Profit Effect" discusses the transition into the "Post-Crypto Twitter (CT)" era, where CT—as a mechanism for market discovery and capital allocation—is losing its ability to repeatedly generate significant market-wide events. CT previously functioned by compressing three key market functions into one interface: narrative discovery (creating shared focus and converting attention into common knowledge), trust routing (enabling informal reputation-based capital allocation), and reflexivity (where narratives drive prices, which in turn validate and amplify narratives). This allowed a "monoculture" to form around simple, widely understood "toys" or narratives that coordinated the entire ecosystem. However, the Post-CT era has emerged due to several failures: "toys" are industrialized and exploited faster, reducing inefficiency windows and concentrating profits; value extraction overwhelms value creation, leading to widespread cynicism; and attention has fragmented across niches, weakening shared context and synchronized liquidity flows. CT is not dead but has evolved from an engine driving market-wide coordination to an interface layer. Real capital allocation now occurs more in high-trust, private "subgraphs" (e.g., closed groups), while CT serves as a surface for signals and narratives. The author argues that the era of CT reliably coordinating the entire market around a single meta-narrative and creating broad, nonlinear returns is over, though the industry continues with shifted dynamics.

比推01/08 03:01

Scrolling Through Crypto Twitter, But No More Profit Opportunities

比推01/08 03:01

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