FF has just played out a typical “pump up + sharp dump” move. After a long period of low-volatility consolidation, the price suddenly surged higher quickly, but was immediately forced back down. This kind of pattern often isn’t a true trend start; it’s more like a “liquidity harvest.” The money that chased the rally after early entrants took short-term profits gets trapped at higher levels—but despite that, the sell orders at the top still remain dominant. However, for now the price is still holding above the earlier consolidation range, which suggests the market hasn’t fully weakened and there is still some support from incoming funds. Key points to watch: if the price can break above the range and hold steady → there’s a chance for another push higher; if it falls back into the original range → most likely it’s just a “pump-and-dump to unload” move. At this stage, FF looks more like a contest of short-term funds rather than a strong trend initiation. Next, it’s not about whether it goes up or down—it’s about whether it can “hold its ground.”

FF-24,86%
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