#数字货币市场洞察 mining company Cango mined 130.7 BTC in the past week, bringing their total holdings to 7,033 BTC. Behind this number lies the mining companies’ long-term market outlook.
Why do mining companies choose to hold onto coins instead of selling them immediately for cash? The answer is simple—their mining costs are far below market price, and with ample cash reserves, they can easily withstand short-term volatility. Essentially, this hoarding behavior is a vote of confidence in Bitcoin’s long-term value, backed by real money.
But should retail investors really copy what mining companies do? Not necessarily. Miners have a steady cash flow, low-cost advantages, and professional risk management systems—while ordinary investors often lack these moats. When the market gets turbulent, mining companies can stay calm, but retail investors might panic.
What’s truly worth learning is not the “hoarding” action itself, but the logic behind their “judgment.” When should you enter the market? At what point should you take profits? There’s no standard answer to these questions—only independent thinking based on your own risk tolerance.
Understanding how big players operate is one thing; blindly following them is another. The biggest mistake in investing is using someone else’s map to walk your own path.
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BrokenYield
· 19h ago
miners hodling is literally just arbitrage on their cost basis... 7033 btc is nothing when you factor in leverage ratio and actual operational risk. they're not voting, they're just playing the only game that makes sense given their inputs. but yeah sure, retail getting cucked trying to copy this playbook never gets old lol
Reply0
MetaverseMigrant
· 12-05 12:40
7033 coins, that number is really something, but for ordinary people like us, what's the point of learning? Their cost is right there.
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GateUser-c802f0e8
· 12-05 12:28
7,033 coins, that's some serious hoarding, but to be honest, I'm still a bit uneasy.
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UnluckyValidator
· 12-05 12:25
We can't emulate mining companies hoarding coins; we still have to look at the thickness of our own wallets.
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GasGoblin
· 12-05 12:21
7,033 coins—mining companies really treat Bitcoin like collectibles. As a retail investor, I can't even compete with their mining costs.
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SighingCashier
· 12-05 12:17
7,033 coins is really impressive, but for us retail investors, blindly following the crowd and hoarding coins is just asking for trouble.
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MoonRocketman
· 12-05 12:13
A hoard of 7,033 coins... RSI has already reached the upper limit of near-earth orbit. The miners’ low-cost advantage is their escape velocity, retail investors just don’t have that kind of fuel.
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GasFeeCrier
· 12-05 12:13
7,033 coins? The mining company's move is truly putting real money on the line to vote; us retail investors just can't follow suit.
#数字货币市场洞察 mining company Cango mined 130.7 BTC in the past week, bringing their total holdings to 7,033 BTC. Behind this number lies the mining companies’ long-term market outlook.
Why do mining companies choose to hold onto coins instead of selling them immediately for cash? The answer is simple—their mining costs are far below market price, and with ample cash reserves, they can easily withstand short-term volatility. Essentially, this hoarding behavior is a vote of confidence in Bitcoin’s long-term value, backed by real money.
But should retail investors really copy what mining companies do? Not necessarily. Miners have a steady cash flow, low-cost advantages, and professional risk management systems—while ordinary investors often lack these moats. When the market gets turbulent, mining companies can stay calm, but retail investors might panic.
What’s truly worth learning is not the “hoarding” action itself, but the logic behind their “judgment.” When should you enter the market? At what point should you take profits? There’s no standard answer to these questions—only independent thinking based on your own risk tolerance.
Understanding how big players operate is one thing; blindly following them is another. The biggest mistake in investing is using someone else’s map to walk your own path.