
Morning Trend | HANG YICK HLDGS runs along the upper line, is it a genuine rise or a short-term speculation?

HANG YICK HLDGS (1894.HK) has recently advanced rapidly near the upper edge of the range, exhibiting a "fast run" characteristic. Technically, a main upward trend often manifests as a sustained increase in volume over several days, with the moving average system diverging upwards and shallow pullbacks; short-term trading typically occurs with a sharp rise over one day or a few days, accompanied by huge volume and a high open followed by a low close the next day, with an increase in long upper shadows, subsequently entering a rapid pullback or wide fluctuations. Currently, it is essential to observe the continuity and quality of pullbacks after the breakout; if it can remain stable for several days after breaking the upper edge, with a shrinking volume during the pullback and not breaking the upper edge, the probability of a main upward segment is higher. From an indicator perspective, if the MACD maintains the extension of red bars above the zero axis and accelerates, it indicates strong momentum; if the red bars suddenly shorten or show signs of a top divergence, caution is needed for a potential slowdown in rhythm or increased volatility. In terms of intraday data, attention can be paid to the changes in large order net inflows and order placements at key price levels; if the main force actively supports during pullbacks and reduces selling pressure during upward movements, it indicates a high degree of capital control. At the industry and market level, if the overall risk appetite of the sector increases and external macro disturbances weaken, the trend is more likely to continue; conversely, when short-term trading characteristics are more pronounced, the importance of rhythm control increases. In terms of strategy, right-side traders can follow signals after confirming breakouts through pullbacks that do not break; avoid emotional chasing after a single-day surge; left-side traders can observe the strength of support within the support zone, and if a sequence of "shrinking pullback + increasing volume again" occurs, they can attempt small position layouts. In terms of risk control, in a high-volatility environment, dynamic stop-loss and take-profit levels should be set to guard against rapid pullbacks after false breakouts
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