Hong Kong to Rally After Golden Cross: Technical AnalysisFeb. 23 (Bloomberg) -- The Hang Seng Index may extend its climb after forming
a “golden cross†pattern this week, a bullish sign that should help the gauge overcome signs of overheating, according to Nomura Holdings Inc.
The measure’s
25-day moving average climbed above its 200- day moving average on Feb. 20, forming a so-called golden cross for the first time since August 2010.
The Hang Seng Index
has rallied 17 percent in the past seven weeks, extending its longest run of gains since October 2010, on signs the U.S. economy is improving, bets China will ease monetary policy and optimism Europe will contain its sovereign-debt crisis.
“The golden cross is a very bullish sign,†said Tacky Cheng, a Hong Kong-based technical analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc. said in a telephone interview yesterday. “The momentum is quite positive for this rally to continue.â€
The last time a “golden cross†pattern occurred between the 25-day and 200-day moving averages of the benchmark Hang Seng Index, on Aug. 13, 2010, the gauge advanced 19 percent to a two-year high on Nov. 8 of that year.
This year’s rally has driven the gauge’s
14-day relative strength index, a measure of momentum, to about 73 as of yesterday, exceeding the threshold of 70 that indicates to some traders it’s overbought. The index slipped 0.8 percent to 21,380.99 today, snapping a two-day gain.
The advance
may slow in the next two to three weeks since short-term technical indicators show the market could be overbought, Cheng said. “This near-term consolidation will be very limited.â€
H-Share Rally
The Hang Seng Index may then climb toward the next resistance at 21,700 points, Cheng said. That level provided firm support in June and July 2011.
The rally in Hong Kong shares will also be powered by rising Chinese shares, Cheng said. The Hang Seng China Enterprise Index, a gauge of mainland shares traded in Hong Kong known as the H-Share index, had a “golden cross†last week when the 25-day moving average climbed above the 200-day moving average, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The H-Share Index has climbed 18 percent this year.
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