At 12 o'clock, when the short positions are set, it will almost start to rally. Why do I say this? Because the stock held by the big players is sufficient; what they need is buying pressure. Retail investors often hesitate to buy when they see a waterfall decline, and I estimate that the previous two spikes have turned quite a few bulls into bears, as not many have caught it, and many have taken profits early. Therefore, there aren’t many long positions among retail traders, while short positions are relatively more. When the big players push to the peak again, they will drop it to give the bears a sense of temporary victory, then slowly pull back. Remember, it must be a slow pullback, not a rapid one. However, it basically won’t look back, then it will consolidate at the previous high, allowing the bears to short again. The result is a spike pattern that explodes. The bears’ FOMO (fear of missing out) is too severe, and a slight drop could see it look down to 780,000. This is the same group of people who got trapped years ago at 70,000.