Last night, the US stock market surged again, and today most sectors will probably be able to stand above the 20-day moving average. Is this really going to be a reversal?



The night before last, the sectors that were aggressively pushed up were robotics and semiconductor materials, and as expected, those two sectors led the gains during the day. Last night, batteries, innovative pharmaceuticals, and photovoltaics soared—will these three sectors take the lead today?

Suddenly, I figured something out: why is it that when I look at the A-share index, the gains or losses the next day never match the previous day's trend? Sometimes it looks great one day but doesn't rise the next; sometimes it looks bad, but unexpectedly jumps up.

Turns out, the main forces are watching the US stock market to decide what to trade the next day.

Sectors like securities and banking are highly controlled domestically and don't follow the same weekly trend as foreign markets. But the weekly trends of other indices basically move in sync with the overseas markets, so the initiative may not be in the hands of domestic funds, but rather with the US market.

When the weekly trends of the US and A-share indices resonate and move upward together, the win rate will be significantly higher.

Currently, in the US market, the weekly moving averages that are already pointing up are: robotics, securities, banking, non-ferrous metals, and gold.
Domestically, the weekly moving average that's pointing up is: communications equipment.

Securities have too little volatility, so not considering them.
Banking, rare earth, and communications equipment have just been speculatively hyped, so avoiding those as well.

So now the main focus should be on robotics—not yet hyped, relatively safe, and with the potential to become the leading sector next quarter.

Sectors with weekly moving averages expected to turn up next week are: innovative pharmaceuticals, semiconductor materials, communications equipment, and chips.
Wait for the weekly close, and only enter the market once it's confirmed that next week's weekly moving average is trending upward.
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HashBrowniesvip
· 7h ago
Whenever the US stock market surges, the A-share market follows suit. It's so obvious that the main players are manipulating things, yet people still can't see it... Should have seen through it long ago. Let's see if this rally in robotics can really take off.
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CodeAuditQueenvip
· 12-05 00:47
There are quite a few logical flaws here... You say the main players are watching US stocks to decide what to trade, but US stocks themselves are manipulated too. Isn't this just a nesting doll situation?
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Gm_Gn_Merchantvip
· 12-05 00:46
Whenever the US stock market makes a move, the A-share market has to follow suit. Simply put, it still lacks any real say in the matter.
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ConsensusDissentervip
· 12-05 00:46
The US stock market sets the pace, and the A-shares just follow along. Are the main players really this unscrupulous?
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DAOdreamervip
· 12-05 00:41
Whenever the US stock market rises, A-shares follow suit. Turns out the main players are just watching the US market’s moves, haha.
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