I was just thinking about how controlled the market might actually be. The crypto market trades 24/7, 365 days a year without stopping. That means someone, somewhere, knows the exact day — and perhaps even the exact time — when a reversal begins. At some point, the broader altcoin market will start moving higher. Markets always move up and down. Just think about how many assets there are on Binance alone — over 300 trading pairs. There will inevitably be a moment when many of them begin reversing at the same time. And when that happens, part of the world will be asleep because of different time zones. Others won't be looking at their phones or computers. Yet somehow, on a single one-minute candle, buying pressure appears and prices start moving higher. Only later does the crowd notice and begin chasing the move. But someone has to buy first. How is it possible that hundreds of assets can react almost simultaneously? It makes you wonder whether the charts we see are largely algorithmic patterns with only a portion of genuine market activity behind them. The same applies to market tops. There were people who seemed to know exactly when Bitcoin would reach a certain level and then reverse. Obviously, it's not a trader sitting in an office manually pressing a sell button to start a major move. Everything is driven by software, algorithms, and bots. But software and bots don't configure themselves. When Bitcoin starts moving, thousands of algorithms around the world react automatically. Not because they received some secret signal, but because they are programmed to respond in similar ways. As a result, a synchronization effect emerges across the market. In reality, the market often looks less like chaos and more like a system where: - 80–90% of trading volume is generated by algorithms; - Large players have a much deeper view of order books and liquidity; - Most market participants react with a delay. $BTC Just a thought