How beautiful, almost jewel-like, the American establishment has once again 'cared' for the people. First — the crypto president, then the presidential coin, discussions about a strategic Bitcoin reserve, loud conferences, endless broadcasts on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Fox News. Everyone was happily explaining that the future has already arrived, clarity will soon come with the Clarity Act, and growth is practically guaranteed.

Investment funds are buying - which means it's time for ordinary people too. The states are discussing reserves - which means everything is serious. Even Arab sheikhs have been persuaded to join the celebration of digital prosperity. The whole of 2025 went under the slogan 'crypto is the new oil', and those who doubted were gently hinted that they simply do not understand progress.

The Trump family writes 'buy buy buy', influencers explain that pullbacks are opportunities, analysts draw endless arrows upward. And then, somewhere around October, a quiet unloading begins - but the positive news background remains. After all, liquidity won't create itself.

And now comes the moment when the music suddenly stops. News changes tone, conversations about crypto reserves disappear, the 'clarity' law is postponed indefinitely, and the market is left alone with reality.

Of course, all this is just coincidences. A coincidence that the hype was global. A coincidence that big players entered before everyone else. A coincidence that optimism ended exactly when liquidity dried up.

And another curious observation for reflection: when markets fall, the dollar rises. Not because it suddenly became better, but because in moments of fear, money returns to cash. Billions and trillions seek refuge - and it turns out again that the most boring currency in the world somehow wins in the most 'innovative' times.

But, of course, this is just the market. Free, honest, and absolutely not subject to mass psychology.