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Scraped on 20/08/2025, 04:15:36 UTC

Movement is the lifeblood of any trader. Institutions don’t like high volatility. I have my doubts

As long as it's an asset that has a well defined potential, high volatility  will not stop institution from investing in the asset. How can you believe that institutions doesn't like high volatility? Matter of fact, some of these institutions are the ones that likes to buy at a discount price and hold longer than some retail traders that sell when the market is still at the early phase of the bullish trend.


I've attached a Bitcoin volatility chart, and it clearly shows a steady decline in this metric. You could even fit an exponential decay curve to it.

Now, regarding institutional funds: they are all restricted from investing in high-volatility, high-risk assets, not only by their own company charters but also by government regulations


Original archived Re: How institutional investors crushed the dream of making it big in crypto
Scraped on 20/08/2025, 03:46:10 UTC
As long as it's an asset that has a well defined potential, high volatility  will not stop institution from investing in the asset. How can you believe that institutions doesn't like high volatility? Matter of fact, some of these institutions are the ones that likes to buy at a discount price and hold longer than some retail traders that sell when the market is still at the early phase of the bullish trend.


I've attached a Bitcoin volatility chart, and it clearly shows a steady decline in this metric. You could even fit an exponential decay curve to it.

Now, regarding institutional funds: they are all restricted from investing in high-volatility, high-risk assets, not only by their own company charters but also by government regulations