Many analysts chase quick viral moments by hyping extreme scenarios, betting people forget yesterday's failed calls. Here's the thing though—if you're consuming macro analysis, pay close attention to analysts who occasionally tell you why markets *won't* collapse. The ones worth listening to aren't the doom-and-gloom merchants or the "everything's fine" brigade. Real credibility shows up when someone can say "volatility's high, but here's why we're not seeing a black swan event." That balanced perspective, the willingness to say "this probably stabilizes," that's rarer than you'd think. Watch for it.
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 5h ago
Honestly, nowadays analysts really make a living by creating panic, then forget the hype they just bragged about yesterday.
Those who dare to say "it won't crash" are actually more credible, really.
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OnchainHolmes
· 5h ago
Really, those analysts who keep shouting "collapse" every day have already been muted by me, so annoying. The ones who dare to say "won't crash" are actually more reliable.
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FOMOrektGuy
· 5h ago
Really, those analysts who constantly shout about a collapse are not worth listening to, but don't trust those who always say "everything is getting better." The key is to find someone who dares to say "it won't collapse," and such voices are indeed rare.
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TerraNeverForget
· 5h ago
This is the real industry pathology. Last year's collapse prophets are now starting a new round of hype.
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BoredRiceBall
· 5h ago
Really, I have muted all those analysts who call for crashes every day. So annoying.
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GateUser-75ee51e7
· 5h ago
Really, those analysts who shout "爆雷" every day are just as annoying as those who say "It's okay." It's better to find someone who dares to say "It might not collapse," because that's more reliable.
Many analysts chase quick viral moments by hyping extreme scenarios, betting people forget yesterday's failed calls. Here's the thing though—if you're consuming macro analysis, pay close attention to analysts who occasionally tell you why markets *won't* collapse. The ones worth listening to aren't the doom-and-gloom merchants or the "everything's fine" brigade. Real credibility shows up when someone can say "volatility's high, but here's why we're not seeing a black swan event." That balanced perspective, the willingness to say "this probably stabilizes," that's rarer than you'd think. Watch for it.