December’s make-or-break moment for crypto’s liquidity crisis

December’s make-or-break moment for crypto’s liquidity crisis

Equities and fixed income have rallied on mounting confidence that the Federal Reserve will deliver a 25 basis point rate cut at its December FOMC meeting. This expectation is reinforced not only by softening consumption data and declining consumer confidence but also by the accelerating political momentum behind Kevin Hassett as the leading candidate to assume the Fed chairmanship. Markets interpret Hassett’s likely appointment as a signal of a more responsive, disinflation-conscious policy framework, thereby pricing in an earlier and potentially deeper easing cycle than previously anticipated.

This macro recalibration is evident across multiple asset classes. US Treasury yields have declined modestly yet meaningfully, with the 10-year yield settling at 4.004 per cent, reflecting a repricing of terminal rate expectations. Concurrently, the US dollar has weakened, providing tailwinds for Asian currencies, which have strengthened amid a narrowing interest rate differential between the US and regional central banks, stable onshore Chinese liquidity conditions, and reduced geopolitical friction following the Xi-Trump dialogue. Chinese equities, particularly in the technology and AI sectors, have rallied in response, indicating that risk capital is already rotating toward markets perceived to offer both valuation support and policy tailwinds.

Despite this broad-based improvement in traditional risk sentiment, digital asset markets remain entrenched in a state of acute pessimism. The CMC Fear and Greed Index stands at 15 out of 100, categorically Extreme Fear, unchanged over the past 24 hours and only marginally above its yearly nadir of 10 recorded on November 22. This persistent fear is notable not for its intensity alone but for its durability in the face of improving macro fundamentals elsewhere.

The total crypto market capitalisation of 3.03 trillion dollars remains below both its 7-day 2.97 trillion dollars and 30-day 3.34 trillion dollars simple moving averages, confirming a technically bearish posture. The 14-day Relative Strength Index has plunged to 27.4, the lowest level since April 2025, signalling exhaustion in the prevailing downtrend. Historical precedent suggests that such oversold conditions, particularly when coinciding with shifts in macro liquidity, often precede short-term mean-reversion rallies.

Complicating the interpretation of this dislocation is the anomalous behaviour in crypto derivatives markets. Over the past 24 hours, perpetual futures volume surged 25.5 per cent to 1.3 trillion dollars, while spot volume contracted by 14.1 per cent to 268 billion dollars. This divergence typically indicates heightened speculative activity absent genuine conviction in directional price movement.

Supporting this interpretation, open interest in perpetual contracts declined by 1.89 per cent to 785 billion dollars, and funding rates collapsed by over 5,000 per cent to a negligible 0.0013 per cent. These metrics collectively suggest that traders are engaging in low-leverage, short-duration positioning rather than establishing sustained long or short exposure. The derivatives market is active, but it is not committed.

The central constraint on crypto market performance remains liquidity. Bitcoin ETFs have recorded net outflows of 28 billion dollars this month, draining a critical source of structural demand precisely when macro liquidity conditions are most fragile. Until these flows stabilise or reverse, or until the Federal Reserve explicitly shifts to a more accommodative stance, crypto markets are likely to remain range-bound and sentiment-constrained.

The three trillion dollar market cap threshold has emerged as a key psychological and technical support level. A sustained breach below this mark could trigger algorithmic and leveraged liquidations, exacerbating downside pressure. A hold above this floor in conjunction with a dovish Fed decision could catalyse a significant liquidity-driven relief rally.

Kevin Hassett’s emergence as the presumptive next Fed Chair amplifies the probability of such an outcome. As Director of the National Economic Council since early 2025, Hassett has consistently advocated for a monetary policy that responds proactively to weakening demand indicators. His potential leadership signals a pivot toward a more traditional Taylor-rule-oriented framework, which would likely accelerate the pace of rate cuts in the event of further softening in labour or consumption data. For digital asset markets, which historically exhibit high beta to shifts in global liquidity conditions, this scenario represents a pivotal inflexion point.

In conclusion, the current market environment reflects a transitional regime characterised by divergent sentiment across asset classes. Traditional markets have already priced in near-term Fed easing, supported by both data and institutional expectations. Crypto markets, by contrast, remain mired in extreme fear despite being technically oversold and exhibiting heightened but uncommitted speculative activity. The critical variable bridging this gap is liquidity, which hinges on two near-term catalysts: the Fed’s December policy decision and the trajectory of Bitcoin ETF flows.

Should the Fed deliver a dovish pivot, particularly under Hassett’s anticipated stewardship, it would likely resolve the current sentiment dislocation and re-anchor crypto valuations to a more favourable macro liquidity regime. Until then, tactical positioning should emphasise monitoring these liquidity signals rather than assuming directional conviction.

 

Source: https://e27.co/decembers-make-or-break-moment-for-cryptos-liquidity-crisis-20251126/

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

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Is crypto entering a self-inflicted crisis? Inside the leverage and solvency spiral

Is crypto entering a self-inflicted crisis? Inside the leverage and solvency spiral

On the surface, US equities posted modest gains on Friday, buoyed by strong forward-looking statements from two major technology companies. The S&P 500 rose 0.3 per cent, the Nasdaq climbed 0.6 per cent, and the Dow Jones added 0.1 per cent. These moves occurred despite a broader backdrop of tightening financial conditions, as the US Federal Reserve signalled increasing reluctance to cut interest rates in the near term. This hesitation has kept risk sentiment muted across global markets, even as equity index futures point to further upside at the open this week.

Bond markets responded with a slight retreat in yields. The two-year Treasury yield fell by 3.5 basis points to 3.574 per cent, while the benchmark 10-year yield declined by 1.9 basis points to 4.077 per cent. Lower yields typically reflect expectations of slower growth or less aggressive monetary tightening, but in this case, the move appears more technical than fundamental, given the Fed’s recent tone.

Meanwhile, the US Dollar Index strengthened by 0.3 per cent to 99.80, its highest level since August, underscoring the greenback’s role as a safe haven amid uncertainty. In commodities, gold pulled back 0.5 per cent to US$4,003 per ounce, as investors took profits following a strong year-to-date rally. Brent crude oil edged up just 0.1 per cent to US$65.07 per barrel, though gains were pared after former President Donald Trump denied reports of an imminent military strike on Venezuela, removing a geopolitical premium from prices.

Asian equities initially mirrored Friday’s losses but rebounded in early Monday trading, suggesting some stabilisation. Attention now turns to a critical week ahead. More than 1,650 US firms, including 133 S&P 500 constituents, will report third-quarter earnings. These results will offer a crucial test of corporate resilience amid elevated rates and slowing global demand. Additionally, the Bank of England is set to announce its monetary policy decision on Thursday. According to Bloomberg surveys, the overwhelming consensus expects the BOE to hold rates steady in November, continuing its pause amid persistent but moderating inflation pressures in the UK.

Against this macro backdrop, the cryptocurrency market tells a markedly different story, one of retrenchment, risk aversion, and structural fragility. Over the past 24 hours, the total crypto market cap declined by 2.06 per cent, extending a seven-day slide of 6.36 per cent. Market sentiment, as measured by the Fear & Greed Index, sits at 36, firmly in “Fear” territory. This anxiety stems not from macro drivers alone but from a confluence of three interrelated stress points: a sharp altcoin selloff, emerging exchange solvency concerns, and a technical breakdown in market structure.

The first and most visible pressure point is the collapse in altcoin performance. The CoinMarketCap Altcoin Season Index plummeted 10 per cent in 24 hours, falling to a reading of 26, the lowest level since April 2025. High-beta assets bore the brunt of the selling. BSquared Network dropped 10.7 per cent, SUI fell 4.8 per cent, and UXLINK suffered a catastrophic 74 per cent decline. This broad-based weakness reflects a pronounced flight to safety within crypto itself, with capital rotating aggressively into Bitcoin. Bitcoin dominance rose by 0.32 percentage points to 59.5 per cent, nearing the psychologically significant 60 per cent threshold. Historically, such dominance levels have coincided with prolonged altcoin underperformance, as risk capital retreats from speculative narratives.

This rotation follows a familiar pattern: the “sell-the-news” reaction after October’s brief surge in optimism around potential HBAR and SOL ETF approvals. That rally attracted leveraged long positions, which are now being unwound. Perpetual futures funding rates across major altcoins rose by 45 per cent in 24 hours, indicating that long-side leverage is being squeezed en masse. Should Bitcoin dominance breach 60 per cent, the outflow from altcoins could accelerate further, triggering additional liquidations in an already fragile ecosystem.

Compounding this dynamic is a renewed fear of centralised exchange risk, centred on MEXC. Users have reported approximately US$40 million in withdrawal freezes, sparking panic amid the platform’s offering of a 600 per cent annual percentage yield on USDT staking, a rate so anomalously high it defies sustainable yield generation in current market conditions. Such yields often signal hidden leverage, unsustainable tokenomics, or outright insolvency. In response, MEXC’s 24-hour trading volume collapsed by 23 per cent, as traders migrated to perceived safer venues like Binance and Coinbase. Stablecoin outflows from the exchange spiked by 37 per cent over the same period, a classic sign of depositor flight.

This episode evokes painful memories of the 2022 collapses of Celsius and BlockFi, where unsustainable yields preceded catastrophic failures. The psychological trauma from that era, what some traders now call “crypto PTSD,” is amplifying selling pressure beyond what fundamentals alone would justify. The fear is not just about MEXC’s solvency but about potential contagion. If a mid-tier exchange like MEXC faces liquidity constraints, could larger platforms with similar opaque practices be next? This question looms large as trust remains the scarcest commodity in crypto.

From a technical perspective, the market structure has also deteriorated. The total crypto market capitalisation has broken below its 30-day simple moving average of US$3.78 trillion, a key support level watched by algorithmic and institutional traders alike. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits at 42.75, below the neutral 50 mark but not yet in oversold territory, suggesting room for further downside. Compounding the bearish signal is a negative MACD divergence, where price makes lower lows while momentum indicators fail to confirm the move, often a precursor to accelerated selling.

Despite the price decline, open interest in derivatives rose by 4.6 per cent in 24 hours. This counterintuitive move indicates that algorithmic traders are actively shorting the breakdown, betting on continued weakness. Such behaviour can create a feedback loop: price drops trigger stop-losses, which fuel further declines, prompting more short entries. In this environment, even modest negative news can spark outsized moves.

The critical question now is whether Bitcoin can hold its US$109,000 support level. While the asset has shown relative resilience, its dominance rising as altcoins bleed, it remains tethered to broader liquidity conditions. A break below US$109,000 could signal a loss of confidence in the entire crypto ecosystem, potentially triggering a broader liquidity crunch. Unlike in 2022, when macro tightening was the primary driver of crypto’s collapse, today’s risks are more endogenous: leverage, exchange opacity, and speculative excess within the asset class itself.

The current selloff is not merely a reaction to Fed policy or dollar strength. It is a stress test of crypto’s internal architecture. The combination of altcoin deleveraging, exchange solvency fears, and technical breakdowns has created a perfect storm of bearish momentum. While traditional markets inch higher on tech strength and earnings hopes, crypto remains mired in a crisis of confidence. Traders must watch not only price levels but also on-chain flows, exchange reserves, and funding rates for signs of stabilisation or further unraveling. Until then, caution remains the only rational stance.

 

Source: https://e27.co/is-crypto-entering-a-self-inflicted-crisis-inside-the-leverage-and-solvency-spiral-20251103/

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

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Israel-Palestine crisis: Navigating the intersection of conflict, aid and blockchain

Israel-Palestine crisis: Navigating the intersection of conflict, aid and blockchain

Top blockchain and crypto news: Gaza tensions, digital tremors, NFTs are not dancing in September, Joe Lubin talks traditional system’s twilight.

In this issue

  1. Gaza tensions, digital tremors
  2. NFTs: not dancing in September
  3. Lubin talks twilight: Traditional system’s eclipse

From the Editor’s Desk

Dear Reader,

It’s a geopolitical conflict with roots stretching back over more than a century. Yet the latest escalation of violence in Israel and Palestine this past week feels particularly shocking. Not least because the Hamas-led attacks throughout Israel over the weekend apparently caught the Israeli government, intelligence services and military — one of the world’s most well-provisioned — completely off-guard.

Reports have emerged suggesting that the militant group Hamas, the de facto political leadership in the Palestinian region of Gaza, used crypto transfers to raise millions of dollars in funds for the weekend’s attacks. It therefore appears we have once again seen financial access weaponized, as it always is in modern day conflict.

The hope now is that crypto steps up to take on a more positive role in what happens next. The blockchain, after all, is advertised as stateless, and permissionless. In its truest guise, it bypasses politics. It could be used here to get much needed humanitarian aid to civilians on both sides of this bloody conflict.

Local Web3 entrepreneurs set up an emergency crypto fund for Israeli victims of the violence — a move that we applaud and recommend readers seek out. But there are also more than 2 million Palestinian civilians inside Gaza who could benefit from financial aid delivered in the form of crypto.

As we have seen in this abhorrent incursion, civilians have cruelly been included in the attack equation. From afar, the complex web of history, politics, and homeland intertwine. On the ground, there are simply lives at stake.

Until the next time,

Angie Lau,
Founder and Editor-in-Chief
Forkast.News


1. Crisis? Bitcoin’s dual response

Israel’s cyber crimes unit, in conjunction with the National Headquarters for Economic Warfare, has announced the freezing of cryptocurrency accounts believed to be instrumental in raising funds for the Gaza-based Palestinian militant group, Hamas.

  • Israeli authorities have reportedly urged Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, to transfer the confiscated funds into Israel’s state treasury.
  • That follows a devastating series of attacks on Israel by Hamas over the weekend. The attacks, which included multiple atrocities against civilians, killed an estimated 1,200 people and wounded at least 2,700 others as of noon Thursday in Hong Kong.
  • In retaliation, Israeli warplanes have bombarded Gaza, a tiny strip of land some 40 km in length and home to over 2 million people. The air strikes have reduced large parts of the area to rubble, with 900 people reported killed and 4,500 injured. Reports indicate that the Israeli military has called up 350,000 reservists and may now be preparing for a ground assault on Gaza.
  • In response to this humanitarian crisis, a consortium of Israeli crypto companies has launched Crypto Aid Israel. This emergency fund aims to support Israeli citizens affected by the ongoing conflict. It is spearheaded by local crypto industry figures and companies such as Fireblocks, 42Studio, Market Across and CryptoJungle. They have teamed up with non-profit organizations to receive and deliver humanitarian aid to affected Israeli communities using cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ether and stablecoins like USDT and USDC.
  • Crypto has been used in conflict before. On-chain data shows that combatants and civilians on both sides of the Russo-Ukrainian war make use of cryptocurrencies as a way to receive and send funds. The use of crypto on both sides of the divide reveals crypto’s dual-edged nature as a tool designed to increase financial access, regardless of political affiliation, location, or intended use.
  • Six months into the conflict with Russia, Ukraine had already raised US$54 million in crypto donations, channeling it towards the provision of military essentials, medicine, and vehicles for their armed forces. On the flip side of that, pro-Russia militias also received over US$20 million in cryptocurrencies in the first year of the conflict.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

The Middle East, as a pivotal hub for global oil production and transit, has long been a focal point of geopolitical tension reverberating through the global economy. When conflicts arise in the region, the immediate concern for markets is often the threat to oil supply chains. Physical infrastructure can be damaged, while fear of wider escalation stokes market uncertainties. Locations like the Suez Canal and the Strait of Hormuz become choke points for global oil supply.

However, the market impact is felt beyond the oil sector. Rising oil prices lead to higher transportation and production costs. As these costs surge, consumers feel the pinch, leading to inflationary pressures. Central banks, in a bid to stabilize economies, adjust monetary policies, which in turn further fuel inflation.

In the midst of these economic fluctuations, investors begin to search for stability. Historically, this stability was sought in gold, a time-tested “safe haven.” However, the digital age has ushered in another contender: Bitcoin.

Dubbed “digital gold” by some, Bitcoin offers certain features that make it attractive in times of uncertainty. Its capped supply makes it a potential hedge against fiat currency depreciation, especially at times of high inflation. Additionally, in regions with limited banking, the decentralized nature of Bitcoin can offer an alternative means of accessing financial services.

But Bitcoin’s journey amid geopolitical unrest is not a straightforward one. While some investors view it as a refuge, others might liquidate volatile assets like cryptocurrencies to cover losses or rebalance portfolios. This duality in investor sentiment can lead to sharp, unpredictable price movements in the Bitcoin market. On top of that, as Bitcoin’s ecosystem intertwines with the broader economy, significant spikes in global oil prices could impact the energy-intensive process of Bitcoin mining, affecting its network dynamics.


2. Wake me up when September ends

The NFT production on Ethereum reached an all-time low of US$17.55 million in September, marking a 12.4% decline from August’s US$20.05 million, according to data from Forkast Labs.

  • Prestigious NFT collections like Bored Ape Yacht Club and CryptoPunks saw a significant drop in their valuation, pointing to a potential shift in the broader market sentiment.
  • Forkast ETH NFT Composite, an index tracking the top 250 NFTs on Ethereum, plunged 48% year-to-date, hitting its low of 715.22 points in September.
  • Polygon’s NFT production experienced a dip, with September’s figures at a seven-month low of US$4.7 million. That was, nonetheless, an overall year-to-date increase of 219%.
  • Anndy Lian, NFT author, suggests the NFT hype from 2021 has tapered off, leading to a selective and realistic approach from buyers.
  • Major NFT marketplaces like OpenSea and Blur reported drops in monthly trading volumes by 31.8% and 38.3% respectively in September.
  • While the market faces challenges, global brands like Starbucks are still adopting NFTs, showcasing new innovative use cases that could reignite interest in the sector.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

There has been a fundamental shift in the way NFT investors collect and trade. They’re finally looking for real value.

Where they aren’t finding value is in new mints, currently at all-time low NFT production levels. Those new NFT mints typically represent run of the mill profile picture collections, which can make creators enormous profits in an instant during a bull market. Today, you’ll be lucky to flip a new mint for what you paid.

After major projects like the CyberKongz’ Genkai, and NWay’s Wreck League failed to sell out their primary sale over the summer, creators hit the brakes on minting new collections.

Still, even with declining primary sales and plummeting value for NFTs on secondary markets, some NFT collections are proving resilient even today. Those collections offer more tangible value, like the Pudgy Penguins NFTs who offer royalties on toy sales to select NFT holders.

Similarly, the Winds of Yawanawa collection by Refik Anadol offers a more abstract, but equally attractive value as pure art. Refik’s art has been featured both on the Las Vegas Sphere, and now in the Museum of Modern Art as the first NFT creator to have his NFT backed digital art welcomed into their collection.

Even more value has been uncovered in new SoFi (social finance) platforms, which have themselves been a main contributor to the decline of the NFT markets. Total new users of the new Friend.tech platform have climbed to over 299,000 unique users, up from 130,000 on Sept. 1. Total locked value in the platform also rose from around 3,260 ETH to approximately 29,200 ETH over the month of September.

Innovation is for now mostly coming from outside NFTs. Until it returns to the non-fungible token market, expect to see September’s trend of all-time-low sales to continue well into October and beyond.


3. Monetary system’s impending sunset

Joe Lubin, chief executive of blockchain technology platform Consensys and a co-founder of Ethereum, spoke to Forkast during the recent Token2049 conference in Singapore. He discussed the parallels between today’s crypto bear market and the dotcom bubble of the late ’90s. Lubin attributes the current crypto downturn to similar waves of unbridled enthusiasm followed by market corrections. He predicted that a marriage between AI and blockchain could be the crypto industry’s route back to prominence.

  • Amid escalating global financial challenges, such as inflation and interest rate hikes, Lubin said that traditional monetary systems might be approaching their twilight.
  • Regulators in the U.S. are scrutinizing the crypto industry. Lubin sees this as a veiled effort to either “slow-roll” or outright suppress the budding industry.
  • Looking abroad, regions like Europe, Asia, and the Middle East are painting a contrasting picture. Those regions, he said, see decentralized tech as an equalizing force against the might of U.S. financial power.
  • A tech marriage is on the horizon, Lubin said. He highlighted the importance of weaving artificial intelligence into the fabric of blockchain technology — and vice versa.
  • There’s no need for society to be overly concerned about artificial intelligence, according to Lubin. He remains buoyant about AI’s potential, particularly in collaboration with decentralized protocols that prevent the concentration of AI control in a small number of hands.

Forkast.Insights | What does it mean?

Lubin is no AI doomer. He made that clear during his interview with Forkast. But while the blockchain mogul and Ethereum godparent outlined a lot of the good that can come from AI’s impending global takeover, he touched on some of its more dystopian aspects also.

Tech is never inherently bad, was the primary thrust of Lubin’s argument on artificial intelligence. The Consensys boss should know. He graduated from Princeton with a degree in computing and electrical science before kicking off his working life in the university’s robotics lab. So he enjoys a pretty solid grasp on the nascent field.

The only danger of artificial intelligence, he said, is if those now working on it allow its power to become entirely concentrated in a small number of hands — the bevy of private companies driving much of today’s AI advances. That would be “failure mode for humanity,” he said, without so much as a flinch.

The remedy for that, Lubin argued, is open source building and the incorporation of decentralized blockchain protocols. That way, the capabilities explored on the back of large language models (LLMs), generative pretrained transformers (GPTs) and the like will remain visible for all to see and make use of.

Your next open source coding tutor? Look no further than AI.

“We need to level up humanity in a big way,” Lubin said. “Our AI allies are going to get better and better at that.”

 

 

Source: https://forkast.news/israel-palestine-navigating-conflict-aid-blockchain/

Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.

j j j