The core logic is actually very simple. Bonds, fixed-rate loans, structured products—these things have existed for so long because of three reasons:
You need to know what the costs are. How much return you can get. Only then can you properly plan how to allocate funds.
This is not some profound knowledge. Institutional investors operate this way. They don't gamble, and they don't touch ambiguous things. Every penny invested has its cost and return clearly laid out.
This approach is worth learning from.
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GasFeePhobia
· 20h ago
Ha, to put it simply, you need data to speak for itself; you can't just go all-in based on gut feeling.
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ZkSnarker
· 21h ago
honestly the whole "institutions don't gamble" thing is hilarious when you know what they actually do behind closed doors... but yeah the cost-benefit clarity part? that's the actual unfair advantage they have over retail. we're out here holding bags of tokens nobody can price, they're literally just reading a spreadsheet lol
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SadMoneyMeow
· 01-16 19:54
To be honest, this set of logic is also popular on the chain, but most people simply can't do it.
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NFTArchaeologis
· 01-16 19:47
In plain terms, it's about opening up the ledger and not playing around with illusions. This is quite similar to the logic of early on-chain assets—transparency is the foundation.
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CrossChainMessenger
· 01-16 19:47
Just understand the cost-benefit clearly; traditional finance indeed does this steadily. But can the institutional approach really be replicated among retail investors? I always feel something's off.
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DisillusiionOracle
· 01-16 19:46
Basically, it's about transparency. The approach that institutions use isn't really mysterious at all.
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MetaDreamer
· 01-16 19:43
Basically, it's a game for risk-averse players; the institutional approach is indeed stable.
How does traditional finance work?
The core logic is actually very simple. Bonds, fixed-rate loans, structured products—these things have existed for so long because of three reasons:
You need to know what the costs are. How much return you can get. Only then can you properly plan how to allocate funds.
This is not some profound knowledge. Institutional investors operate this way. They don't gamble, and they don't touch ambiguous things. Every penny invested has its cost and return clearly laid out.
This approach is worth learning from.