Recently, I've met and exchanged ideas with quite a few old veterans in the industry. Today, I'll explain the game of cryptocurrency stocks to everyone.

Assuming you have $10 million on hand.

The first step is to spend $5 million to buy a shell company listed on the NASDAQ. Many projects in the cryptocurrency sphere are backed by publicly listed companies, which are often these kinds of 'shells'—they have listing qualifications but lack substantial business, and the acquisition price is particularly cheap. This is quite common on Wall Street; to put it simply, it's about buying a legal ticket with money.

The second step is to hand over the remaining $5 million to an investment bank (FA) to help you promote the stock. Once the FA operates, they package a good story and concept for you, then help you raise $100 million in the market. At this point, your company's market value is already $100 million on paper.

The third step is to use that $100 million to buy cryptocurrencies, announce the establishment of XX Coin micro-strategy, and short a portion to hedge against risks. This way, regardless of whether the cryptocurrency price goes up or down, you won't lose. It's equivalent to locking in profits, ensuring a guaranteed return. Your paper assets stabilize at $100 million, and the market value naturally won't drop.

The fourth step is that the market starts to catch on. Your company has both cryptocurrency assets and is riding the wave of ETF and U.S. stock hot spots, causing retail investors to start buying your stock wildly, driving the stock price higher and higher, creating a premium.

The fifth step is that you begin cashing out and selling stocks accordingly.

Currently in the U.S. stock market, other institutions are wide-eyed at this operation—'Wow, this strategy is too twisted; it’s a guaranteed profit!' So everyone starts copying your playbook: acquiring shells, promoting stocks, creating stories, buying cryptocurrencies, and hedging.

The result is that hundreds of billions of dollars flow from U.S. stocks, funds, and Wall Street into the cryptocurrency market.

This money enters the market to buy cryptocurrencies for hedging, causing cryptocurrency prices to soar directly.

As cryptocurrency prices soar, related concept stocks on the U.S. side are also driven up.

Stock prices rise again, and you exchange stocks for cash, buy more cryptocurrencies, and promote again...

This creates a cycle of 'left foot stepping on the right foot, spiraling upwards.'

After two years, the entire cryptocurrency market has been played into fools by Wall Street. They not only made money from cryptocurrencies but also profited from stories, liquidity, valuations, and future money, leaving all the mess behind for retail investors in the cryptocurrency market. #加密市场观察 #美国加征关税 $BTC