#风险回报比 If you want to make money in the cryptocurrency world, you first need to understand Trump's big direction.

Trump is forcing the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, ostensibly to alleviate the U.S. debt crisis, but the real intention is to pave the way for increased tariffs and disrupt the global economy. If he recklessly raises tariffs directly, the U.S. will become a global enemy. Trump is using the pretext of the U.S. debt crisis to point the finger at the Federal Reserve. Powell only needs to oppose, and Trump can maintain his 'victim' persona to continue applying pressure, providing political and public opinion space for imposing tariffs externally. Although the two seem to be in conflict, they actually form an understanding, playing out a drama of 'the White House against Wall Street'.

China is the only country that has conducted comprehensive and reciprocal countermeasures, thus falling into Trump's trap. Other countries mainly rely on negotiation, while China's countermeasures, although logical, actually trigger expectations of renminbi depreciation, increasing capital outflow pressure, hindering the internationalization process of the renminbi, and putting pressure on domestic assets and consumption simultaneously. Trump hopes to induce systemic financial turmoil through China's proactive counterattack, undermining the stable foundation of the Chinese economy.

After announcing a comprehensive increase in tariffs, on April 7, a panic sell-off in global markets occurred, causing many stock markets to plummet. When the market generally expected the U.S. stock market to also crash, the Trump administration forcefully lifted the U.S. stock market back into the green. This action clearly indicates that tariffs and trade wars can not only strike other countries but also manipulate market sentiment, achieving precise harvesting of liquidity amid global panic. The drop is bait, the rise is harvest; the rhythm is completely controlled by the U.S.

Although Trump's foreign strategies have not publicly named China, every action targets China: the trade war strikes at China's export strength; pushing for a ceasefire in Ukraine and Russia to develop alternatives to reduce U.S. and European energy and resource dependence on China; sanctioning Russia to preset tool paths for future financial and technological blockades against China; promoting 'de-risking' in supply chains, which is essentially systematic 'de-China-ization'; adjusting Europe's energy structure to marginalize the influence of China and Russia.

The U.S. debt crisis is merely a cover; containing China is the goal. Trump is not making random moves but is planning precisely. A complete script of 'interest rate cuts - tariffs - stock market crash - recovery' is unfolding. Although the two U.S. parties are in conflict, the resolve to curb China has never wavered. China is facing a structural, highly mature system game with rhythm control.