Interesting Data Statistics:
1. "Finger-Tip Maniac": According to statistics, he posted a total of 6,168 posts throughout 2025, averaging about 18 posts per day. During his first year in office, from January 20, 2025 to January 20, 2026, the total number of posts was around 6,200.
2. Top 5 Most Frequently Used Words:
No.1 "Great": Appeared over 1,400 times, an absolute catchphrase.
No.2 "Never": Appeared 561 times, often used to express "never surrender."
No.3 "Border": Appeared 512 times, a core policy focus.
No.4 "Biden": Appeared 277 times, still a major target of comparison even after leaving office.
No.5 "Siege": Appeared 276 times, revealing his "wartime president" mentality.
3. "Golden Posting Time": The most active time of day is 6:00 PM (494 posts throughout the year), and the quietest time is 4:00 AM.
4. Single-Day "Burst" Record: December 1, 2025, set a single-day record—168 posts throughout the day. Of these, 147 posts were posted in the two hours between 10:00 PM and midnight, averaging one post every 40 seconds.
The Most Market-Destructive "Fingers":
1. "Black Two Days" for US Stocks: On April 2, 2025, a sudden post announced tariffs for "Liberation Day." The S&P 500 index plummeted 10.5% in the following 48 hours, wiping out trillions of dollars in market value, marking the worst performance since 2020.
2. Fed's "Verbal Barrage" Fails: In the second half of 2025, multiple posts criticized Powell as "too late" and demanded an interest rate cut to 1%. This triggered extreme panic in the market, with the 10-year US Treasury yield rising instead of falling, surpassing a high of 4.26% earlier this year.
3. Defense Stock "Buyback Ban": On January 7, 2026, the US specifically criticized defense contractors such as Raytheon, threatening to prohibit their stock buybacks and dividends. Lockheed Martin's stock price plummeted by 5% in response.
4. Credit Card Interest Rate Cap: On January 9, 2026, the US proposed capping credit card interest rates at 10%. Capital One and Synchronous Financial's stock prices both fell by more than 6% that day.
5. Greenland "Land Purchase" Controversy: The US again proposed purchasing Greenland and threatened to impose tariffs on opposing European countries. This geopolitical friction shook market confidence in US assets, indirectly contributing to the rise in US Treasury yields.