Recently, I came across an interesting case. A leading publicly listed company paused briefly and then resumed action — this time purchasing 1229 Bitcoins, with an average cost basis of $74,997 per coin.
What this reflects is worth pondering. True long-term investors don't care about the price fluctuations on a single day or week; they focus on what kind of asset structure they are building, how long they plan to hold, and what their goals are. No matter how noisy the short-term market is, it can't disrupt this rhythm.
Compare this to most market operations — cutting losses when prices fall, chasing gains when prices rise. Such frequent switching incurs significant costs and psychological strain. Conversely, those who can stay calm and patient tend to achieve different, better long-term results.
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ContractHunter
· 2025-12-31 05:28
Really, big institutions' moves this time are just teaching us what patience means. While retail investors are still struggling with cutting losses and chasing highs, they've already set their sights on years down the road.
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HodlOrRegret
· 2025-12-29 15:54
1. Public companies are quietly accumulating coins, while some are still buying the dip and cutting losses. The mindset gap is truly astonishing.
2. Continuing to buy at a cost of 75,000? It shows that institutions are not afraid of a drop at all. We retail investors need to learn this kind of resolve.
3. The problem is that most people can't hold on at all. Just glancing at their accounts makes them want to act. That's a failure of mindset.
4. Got it, institutions are playing a ten-year game, while retail investors are engaged in a ten-minute psychological battle.
5. They call for long-term investing but cut losses and chase highs themselves. They don't even believe in their own stories.
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NFTBlackHole
· 2025-12-29 15:40
Wow, bought at 75,000, this move is indeed aggressive. But to be honest, retail investors like us are constantly brainwashed by price fluctuations, while institutions have long seen through it—they're just quietly accumulating coins.
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zkProofGremlin
· 2025-12-29 15:39
The actions of big companies this time indeed taught retail investors a lesson; it really takes patience to stay calm.
It's okay, those who keep cutting losses will never make this kind of money.
This is the true way of institutions; we're still debating the ups and downs.
If they are willing to continue adding positions at this cost, it shows they've already figured it out.
Those who frequently trade are the ones whose mentality hasn't stabilized; they should reflect.
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Rugman_Walking
· 2025-12-29 15:30
Big companies' moves are just telling retail investors how to die, really.
Recently, I came across an interesting case. A leading publicly listed company paused briefly and then resumed action — this time purchasing 1229 Bitcoins, with an average cost basis of $74,997 per coin.
What this reflects is worth pondering. True long-term investors don't care about the price fluctuations on a single day or week; they focus on what kind of asset structure they are building, how long they plan to hold, and what their goals are. No matter how noisy the short-term market is, it can't disrupt this rhythm.
Compare this to most market operations — cutting losses when prices fall, chasing gains when prices rise. Such frequent switching incurs significant costs and psychological strain. Conversely, those who can stay calm and patient tend to achieve different, better long-term results.