Since the beginning of 2025, overseas capital enthusiasm for US assets has not diminished despite market fluctuations. Although there were several market disturbances around mid-April, the data for the entire year shows that foreign investment in US assets still significantly exceeds the level of the same period in 2024—annualized data clearly indicates this trend.
What does this reflect? It indicates that global capital remains optimistic about the US economy and asset prospects. Regardless of short-term setbacks, the inflow of long-term funds often represents the market's true judgment of fundamentals. Data from authoritative institutions such as the Treasury Department is highly credible.
For traders, this sustained net inflow of foreign capital often signals that US dollar assets and related markets may continue to demonstrate resilience. Of course, short-term market changes ultimately depend on specific events and data releases, but this overall trend is worth paying attention to.
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MintMaster
· 2025-12-31 20:22
Long-term funds won't deceive, US assets still have a chance in this wave
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LiquidityWitch
· 2025-12-31 04:45
Big funds are big funds. No more words, let's see the voting results.
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FlatlineTrader
· 2025-12-28 21:49
Long-term funds don't deceive, the US dollar is still attractive.
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OvertimeSquid
· 2025-12-28 21:45
Long-term capital indeed hasn't been reckless this time; US assets are still a money-making machine.
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Again, it's Treasury Department data... this data should be taken with a grain of salt; trusting it at about 80% is enough.
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Foreign capital continues to flow in net? Then my USD position should still have hope. Stay calm, stay calm.
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Short-term fluctuations are all fake; looking at annualized data is the real deal. This logic makes sense.
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Honestly, the US is still the world's main financier. Its resilience is truly well-managed.
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The Treasury Department's statements are full of hype, but the market might change its tune again next week. Who can be trusted?
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USD assets remain resilient? Then just keep holding them; anyway, you can't run away.
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Is this implying that the dollar still needs to rise? That's interesting.
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Long-term vs. short-term is always a battle; it still depends on specific data. General conclusions are just for listening.
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Global capital is all betting on the US; this is too intense. Is there no other choice?
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RektRecorder
· 2025-12-28 21:43
Foreign capital is still疯狂 buying US stocks. Are these people really not afraid of halving?
Long-term funds won't deceive, fundamentals speak for themselves.
The old fox of the US dollar still has tricks up its sleeve; it seems we need to keep following.
The Treasury Department's data is right here; it's indeed solid.
Short-term fluctuations are just white noise; this is the real signal.
Why does it feel like the whole world is betting on the US...
If the data is so strong, how can it still fall? It would have to be dragged down even more.
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SerumSqueezer
· 2025-12-28 21:35
Long-term funds don't lie; the US dollar's ability to attract capital is indeed strong.
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UncleLiquidation
· 2025-12-28 21:30
Long-term funds are the real story; short-term fluctuations are just noise.
Since the beginning of 2025, overseas capital enthusiasm for US assets has not diminished despite market fluctuations. Although there were several market disturbances around mid-April, the data for the entire year shows that foreign investment in US assets still significantly exceeds the level of the same period in 2024—annualized data clearly indicates this trend.
What does this reflect? It indicates that global capital remains optimistic about the US economy and asset prospects. Regardless of short-term setbacks, the inflow of long-term funds often represents the market's true judgment of fundamentals. Data from authoritative institutions such as the Treasury Department is highly credible.
For traders, this sustained net inflow of foreign capital often signals that US dollar assets and related markets may continue to demonstrate resilience. Of course, short-term market changes ultimately depend on specific events and data releases, but this overall trend is worth paying attention to.