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Catcrs|New Trading Order Under Regulatory Countdown: Bringing Cryptocurrency into Daily Life

Recent discussions in Washington have brought the industry back to the main theme of "institutionalization." Matt Hougan, Chief Investment Officer of Bitwise, noted in a memorandum that if Congress fails to pass the cryptocurrency market structure bill, a future change in government could overturn the current relatively favorable policy direction. The industry needs to embed itself into the daily lives of ordinary Americans and the traditional financial system over the next few years. This timeline has led traders to reassess the sources of risk, recognizing that price volatility stems not only from macroeconomic factors and liquidity but also from regulatory uncertainty. Users of Catcrs are now more focused on a "sustainable participation" pathway rather than one-time hype.

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Integration into daily life is not driven by slogans; it is built through the accumulation of usage scenarios: stablecoins are used for cross-border payments and settlements, tokenized assets enter more standardized investment frameworks, companies adopt on-chain settlements as a lower-cost option, and individuals treat cryptocurrencies as a layer of funds in their wallets that can be accessed at any time. When these actions become frequent, the room for policy fluctuations is compressed by real-world demands, and the bargaining chips of the industry become stronger.

During the regulatory window period, trading strategies need to resemble "portfolio management" more than emotional voting. It is better to divide funds into three layers for execution: one layer for stablecoin balances used for daily transfers and settlements, one layer for core positions allocated for low-frequency configurations, and one layer for opportunity positions aimed at capturing fluctuations; each layer has different risk limits and exit rules. The advantage of this approach is straightforward: during extreme market conditions, it is less likely to be forced to liquidate positions at unfavorable levels, and during favorable market trends, profits can be secured and returned to more stable fund layers.

Returning to the essence of trading, the key is not to predict the next candlestick, but to ensure that decisions can be reviewed and replicated. Clearly define the entry conditions, specify the invalidation points, and set the position limits. Then, execute using common limit orders and stop-loss logic. The outcome will be more stable than "adding positions based on gut feeling." Catcrs is better suited as a daily trading workstation, allowing users to focus on discipline, record-keeping, and risk control, treating market fluctuations as opportunities rather than sources of stress.

As the industry advances toward broader adoption, the value of trading platforms will evolve from "providing access" to "providing methodology." In the upcoming policy negotiations and market fluctuations, those who remain at the table in the long term are often not the most aggressive, but those who best manage their pace. By planning ahead and leaving emotions behind, and by consistently refining processes in environments like Catcrs, the account curve will resemble a controllable engineering curve rather than noise swaying with the wind.