Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
I've been watching this market closely, and something's become pretty clear: people have already decided the bull run is done. That belief alone is reshaping everything we're seeing right now.
It's not like Bitcoin crashed because fundamentals broke down or altcoins died because innovation stopped. The real problem is simpler and honestly more dangerous—the narrative has shifted. Everyone's convinced the cycle is finished, and that conviction is now doing more damage than any actual bad news could.
Here's what gets me: we still see traders talking about potential, but their actions tell a different story. They're trimming risk, taking profits early, waiting for those "lower levels" that might never come. Every bounce gets sold harder than the last one. Nobody's rushing in aggressively anymore. It's like the market knows something, even if nobody can quite articulate what.
The psychology is brutal. Most traders lived through past cycles—they remember the grinding, patience-destroying declines that followed every macro top. That memory is embedded now. Even people who are structurally bullish aren't buying with conviction because they're haunted by how low those historical bottoms actually went. So they wait. And waiting itself becomes selling pressure.
Macro noise isn't helping either. Japan raising rates for the first time in decades, cracks in the AI trade, derivatives inflating demand without real spot inflows, the MicroStrategy pressure narrative, debt risks creeping back into headlines—it all feeds the fear. When you see analysts casually floating Bitcoin at $10K scenarios, it plants seeds regardless of whether it makes sense. Fear doesn't need logic. It just needs distribution.
This is actually the most dangerous phase of any cycle. Not because prices are crashing, but because the market is treating it like the cycle is already complete. Rallies look suspect. Risk-taking gets punished. Liquidity feels fragile. People are bleeding out slowly through overconfidence and volatility chasing instead of getting wiped out dramatically.
Here's the uncomfortable part: whether the bull run is actually over might not even matter right now. What matters is that the market believes it is. And markets move on belief long before reality catches up. This isn't the time for hero trades or blind conviction or chasing whatever narrative's trending. This is when staying solvent beats being right. Cycles don't really end when price collapses—they end when confidence dies. And right now, confidence is barely hanging on.