Investors should look beyond short-term data and focus on structural policy shifts now unfolding $BTC

Before becoming U.S. Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent spoke of a “new Bretton Woods,” while Stephen Mirandubbed it the “Mar-a-Lago Accord” — a framework aimed at rebalancing global trade through geopolitical alignment, tariffs, and a weaker U.S. dollar.

This may already be in motion. Since Trump took office on Jan 20, 2025, the trade-weighted USD has fallen nearly 9%. A key signal is the Japanese yen, which has recently strengthened after long resistance, hinting at possible U.S.–Japan policy coordination.

⚠️ The risk: a deliberate USD weakening could destabilize U.S. mega-cap equities, now heavily owned by both foreign investors (~30%) and U.S. households at record levels.

#WhenWillBTCRebound If global capital flows reverse, volatility could spike fast.
In a world of flexible FX, capital flows — not rates — may be the most underestimated risk.