You ever notice how Wall Street patterns just keep repeating themselves? Jesse Livermore nailed it when he said there's nothing truly new in the market. History doesn't repeat, but it absolutely rhymes.



I've been tracking this for years, and it's wild how predictable things become once you see the pattern. Last year I caught something interesting with CoreWeave's IPO setup mirroring Google's 2004 move. Both were hot tech plays, both had that same U-turn base structure, and CoreWeave ended up delivering an insane 118% return in 2025. Even Paul Tudor Jones used a 1929 chart overlay to predict the 1987 crash.

Now here's where it gets interesting. I was scrolling through charts recently and spotted something that made me do a double-take with Oklo. This small modular reactor play is forming an almost exact deja vu pattern to what happened in April 2024. Back then, the stock got beat down roughly 70% in a zig-zag correction, hit that 200-day moving average, and then absolutely exploded from around $17 to nearly $200.

Right now? Same thing is playing out. We're seeing that identical zig-zag pullback, down about 63% or so, and it just found support at the rising 200-day MA. The technical setup is screaming familiarity.

What makes this deja vu moment even more compelling is the fundamental backdrop. Trump's been pretty clear that big tech companies aren't going to push electricity costs onto consumers. That means data centers need to go off-grid. Microsoft already committed to overhauling its energy footprint. And here's the kicker: about a third of planned data centers are going to operate independently from the grid. That's massive for nuclear plays like Oklo.

Then you've got Meta just signing a deal with Oklo for a 1.2 GW energy campus. This isn't speculation anymore. These are real partnerships backing the thesis.

The bottom line? When you see these chart patterns repeat, and they've got this much fundamental juice behind them, you pay attention. Oklo's setup looks eerily familiar to 2024, except this time the catalysts are even stronger. Whether history truly repeats or just rhymes, the technical and fundamental alignment here is hard to ignore.
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