It is known that the bullish market sees 66500 as a defensive support point for longs.

It is known that the technical analysts see 66500 as a signal to short once it breaks.

The evening's market can be easily speculated; if the market starts to accelerate downward before midnight, the first wave will definitely break below 66500. Note that breaking below 66500 will not accelerate but will instead fake break, spike, and then quickly rebound back up, with the expectation reaching around 67000.

This action can both sweep away the stop losses of technical analysts and conservative retail traders who have long positions, and also trick technical analysts into chasing shorts, subsequently sweeping the stop losses of those short positions.

For retail traders who are overly optimistic about their long positions, the false break of 66500 is just a false alarm, and the spike rebound will lead them to continue holding their long positions. The market may then continue to slowly drop towards 66500, oscillating around 66500 repeatedly, before directly starting to accelerate downward in the early morning phase, with the first wave directly hitting the 64800-64500 range, with an extreme case hitting 63500-63200 and then quickly rebounding to oscillate around 65000.

If after midnight the market is still above 66500, then in the later half of the night, there will be a direct wave breaking through, providing no opportunity to chase shorts and also no opportunity for long positions to exit (unless with stop losses). The market will then directly consolidate at 63500, followed by a rebound to around 65000 before adjusting downward.

The inference leads to a rather audacious operation for those who are waiting. They can wait for the evening to see a false break of 66500, then short in the area of 67000-67500 with a stop loss at 68000, boarding the second wave of ladder-like downward movements at the starting point, and not taking profits, including at 63500, but instead waiting for further notification to add positions when I find the second strong rebound point.