$FET
has already completed two major expansion cycles, and both followed a remarkably similar structure.
After prolonged periods of accumulation, the market eventually transitioned into explosive momentum
carrying the asset thousands of percent higher before entering another extended correction.
Today, the chart appears to be approaching that same stage once again.
Since the latest macro bottom, price has stabilized after a deep correction that removed the majority of speculative interest from the market.
Volume has cooled, volatility has compressed, and the emotional extremes that typically dominate late-stage bull markets have largely disappeared.
Historically, these conditions often develop before the next sustained expansion begins.
One of the most interesting observations is how each previous cycle respected a rising long-term trajectory.
Every major rally not only exceeded the previous expansion but also continued building on the broader trend rather than breaking it.
If that historical rhythm continues, the current structure suggests that the next leg higher could unfold in multiple phases rather than a single impulsive move.
The first objective would simply be reclaiming higher market structure and confirming that long-term buyers have regained control.
From there, momentum could gradually accelerate toward the previous macro resistance zones before the market begins targeting completely new price territory.
Strong trends rarely move in a straight line
they tend to advance through successive waves of consolidation and expansion.
Of course, no historical pattern guarantees that price will repeat exactly as before.
Market conditions change, liquidity changes, and every cycle develops differently.
However, when an asset repeatedly follows the same macro framework across multiple years
it’s difficult to ignore the possibility that history may once again provide a useful roadmap.
If buyers continue defending the current accumulation zone
has already completed two major expansion cycles, and both followed a remarkably similar structure.
After prolonged periods of accumulation, the market eventually transitioned into explosive momentum
carrying the asset thousands of percent higher before entering another extended correction.
Today, the chart appears to be approaching that same stage once again.
Since the latest macro bottom, price has stabilized after a deep correction that removed the majority of speculative interest from the market.
Volume has cooled, volatility has compressed, and the emotional extremes that typically dominate late-stage bull markets have largely disappeared.
Historically, these conditions often develop before the next sustained expansion begins.
One of the most interesting observations is how each previous cycle respected a rising long-term trajectory.
Every major rally not only exceeded the previous expansion but also continued building on the broader trend rather than breaking it.
If that historical rhythm continues, the current structure suggests that the next leg higher could unfold in multiple phases rather than a single impulsive move.
The first objective would simply be reclaiming higher market structure and confirming that long-term buyers have regained control.
From there, momentum could gradually accelerate toward the previous macro resistance zones before the market begins targeting completely new price territory.
Strong trends rarely move in a straight line
they tend to advance through successive waves of consolidation and expansion.
Of course, no historical pattern guarantees that price will repeat exactly as before.
Market conditions change, liquidity changes, and every cycle develops differently.
However, when an asset repeatedly follows the same macro framework across multiple years
it’s difficult to ignore the possibility that history may once again provide a useful roadmap.
If buyers continue defending the current accumulation zone