December ETH Price Prediction · Posting Challenge 📈
With rate-cut expectations heating up in December, ETH sentiment turns bullish again.
We’re opening a prediction challenge — Spot the trend · Call the market · Win rewards 💰
Reward 🎁:
From all correct predictions, 5 winners will be randomly selected — 10 USDT each
Deadline 📅: December 11, 12:00 (UTC+8)
How to join ✍️:
Post your ETH price prediction on Gate Square, clearly stating a price range
(e.g. $3,200–$3,400, range must be < $200) and include the hashtag #ETHDecPrediction
Post Examples 👇
Example ①: #ETHDecPrediction Range: $3,150–
Why Comparing Today's AI Boom to the Dot-Com Crash Misses the Biggest Picture
Yeah, there’s probably some bubble energy in AI stocks right now. Some of them are definitely stretched on valuation—looking at you, unprofitable companies burning cash while riding hype.
But here’s the thing people keep getting wrong: not all AI stocks are created equal, and the comparison to the dot-com bust has a critical blind spot.
The One Factor That’s Completely Different
Dot-com bubble popped in March 2000 because the Fed was aggressively tightening—rates went from 4.75% to 6.50% between mid-1999 and mid-2000. Rising rates kill two things speculators need:
The Fed even kept raising after the crash crashed (including a half-percent hike in May 2000), which basically poured gasoline on the fire. That policy mistake cascaded into a recession that lasted until 2001.
Today’s Environment? Completely Different
Fast forward to 2024-2025, and we’re in cutting mode:
The Fed’s basically doing the opposite of 2000. Rate cuts support growth stocks and speculative plays—they make borrowing cheaper and bonds less attractive.
December’s FOMC meeting? Market odds of another 0.25% cut jumped from 50% a week ago to 84% as of late November. That tailwind remains.
The Real Takeaway
Yes, some AI darlings are overvalued. Yes, due diligence matters (watch out for “growth” that’s just M&A masquerading as organic). But the structural backdrop that killed the dot-com bubble—rising rates forcing capital out of growth—simply doesn’t exist right now.
That’s not permission to YOLO into every AI stock. It’s just context that the playbook from 2000 doesn’t automatically apply in 2025.