 Well, it's pulled back a little bit. So yeah, I think maybe traders on a lower timeframe are being probably caught out. You can see, look at that long wick right there, yeah? So we've just had good news and we haven't had price follow through. You know, so many traders will say, oh, why, why, why, why, why, what's going on? Or maybe they're trying to trick me out. I should go long now. If there's no reason to go long, then this is just getting traders to go short. So for example, look at that one-minute chart, yeah? If you were trading on a one-minute timeframe chart and you see a candle like that, what are you gonna do? Yeah, you're gonna obviously sell in it. Right, where are you placing your stop-loss? Some traders on a one-minute chart, you're not, I mean, most traders aren't gonna have. Yeah, that'd be a massive stop. Yeah, they're not gonna have a massive stop-loss because for a one-minute timeframe trader and there's lots of them, there's lots of scalpers, right? These, you know, this is a 40, a 50-pip stop is not something that you wanna have. That's just ridiculous for a scalper. Like, you're more looking at a trade where it's like, you know, maybe about, you know, three, four, five pips, that's more of your stop-loss, right? So then, you know, once you start to, the market starts to pull back for the liquidity, by the way, this is known as an unfair auction as well, but I'll get into that another time. But yeah, and it starts to pull back, it starts to stop these traders out. And if they're not trading with any stop-losses or they're moving their stop-losses now, all of a sudden, now they, instead of risking maybe 1%, yeah, for maybe three or four pips, now they're risking maybe 10%, 15% on their account because they don't wanna take this stop. And all the market is doing is just basically pressuring these guys, you know what I mean? And it's gonna eventually stop them all out. Before potentially going on its way. Remember we were just talking about liquidity, the market, you know, in the short-term, has to search for the liquidity. In the long-term, in the long-term, it reveals its hand, but in the short-term, it's really more about the liquidity side of things. And so, if there's a lot of banks and institutions that wanna go short, yeah, they need, what, buy orders, yeah? They need buy orders for them to sell because in order to buy the dollar, they need to press sell, yeah? They need buyers to take the other side of their trade, right? And so, where are the buy orders? So who is buying in the face of that big, you know, bearish candle? Who's buying there? No one. So there's likely no liquidity, yeah? Below the market for the prices to continue going lower, yeah? That make sense? Well, not enough. But then, what is, where is the buy orders is the question, right? Where's the buy orders? So if you're going short, yeah? Where's your stop-loss? It's gonna have to be above, right? And if stop-loss is above, your stop-loss is a buy order. And the way that you lose, let's say, for example, you risk 10 pounds, yeah? And your stop-loss is, let's say, 15 pounds, yeah? When your stop-loss gets hit, you're forced to buy back at 15 pounds. So then you lose five pounds. That's why, you know, you're at a loss because you're thinking you can sell here and then buy back for five. That's how you make money. So for 10, five out of five, I've made five pounds. But if you buy, if you sell here and are forced to buy back at 15, then you've lost five pounds, yeah? And so if the buy orders going back to liquidity are not below the market, then the stop-losses are buy orders too, right? So they are the ones where anyone who wants to buy in for a cheaper price, yeah? This is where price is. Cheaper price can scale in, the institution can scale in at cheaper prices, right? That's what it can do. Rather than buying down here, because this is expensive, yeah? And they trigger these stop-losses. They're forced to buy back. And if you're selling zero-sum game, who are you selling to? Who are you, you know what I mean? Who's on the other side of this trade? The institutions. I remember they got deeper pockets than most traders, right? They trade differently. So they're just scaling in. If this is truly a move where over the medium and long-term, they want prices to go down to here, then ultimately they're just looking to buy at cheaper prices while stopping everybody out. Also as well, at the same time, can you imagine how many traders are going long here? Thinking, oh yeah, I'm gonna be clever and I'm gonna start to buy now. And then traders start to buy in. And then that's liquidity as well, because then they can start to push the market down and they've got enough liquidity to sustain the push to the downside. They didn't have enough maybe here, not enough liquidity down here, but it definitely will do as traders, facing their long traders, facing their stop losses behind these types of swings, right? You've got higher, high, higher, low, and then they stop loss there, put one there, put one there. So there's lots of liquidity being built up in these areas. So in the short-term, that's why it's very difficult. I wouldn't necessarily trade these lower time frames because it's more driven by liquidity. Do you know what I mean? Yes, you do have great risk reward, right? You can potentially, if you pick this top here and only risked about two or three pips, this would have been a fantastic trade. And in a short space of time, like in a space of what, maybe five minutes, you could have made five, six, seven, eight times your money, right? That would be an excellent trade. But the difficult years on lower time frames is that the levels may not hold as well, or unlike it to hold as well. And like I said, it's more driven by more liquidity rather than the fundamental side of things. Yeah, so that's that. But there's a lot of traders being stopped out at the moment, you can see it. And I think a lot of traders are again, scratching their heads and panicking and going, oh, what's going on? But who knows? I don't try to figure out these things unless there's something that's changed drastically, again, with the interpretation of the fundamentals. Any moves that go against me, yeah, I just look at probably more of a buying opportunity to get in short, again, at levels. I'm not saying I wanna get short there or anything, but we're just saying that it's an opportunity to maybe try and add in on trades on a higher timeframe. But let's see, I don't know what's been happening and what the sentiment is, but yeah, let's see. Let's see if it draws in more traders to go long and then stop them out maybe, because it's today, Friday, isn't it? So maybe next week might come. If nothing has changed in terms of the market doesn't think, or the market thinks that rate cuts have been, there's been too many rate cuts priced in, then eventually prices should still continue to want to go to the downside, but let's see.