The Hang Seng Is Too Hot Now, but Long-Term Attractive

Expert market comment made by senior analyst Alex Kuptsikevich of the FxPro Analyst Team: The Hang Seng Is Too Hot Now, but Long-Term Attractive
FxPro | 285 days ago

The Chinese stock market is closed for a national holiday, but futures and ETFs are trading and are on another strong run today. The Hang Seng Index is up 9.6% from its close on 30 September (there was no trading on Tuesday), the second strongest rise since the surge on 16 March 2022. Then it rebounded after a setback, but now it is an acceleration of the rally, taking the index cumulatively up 34% from the 11 September lows.

 

Wednesday’s rally is the result of a short squeeze, as it comes at the close of the main Chinese markets and is not fuelled by optimism on global exchanges. On the contrary, global markets have moved away from risk in recent days, and the S&P 500 has been trading near the top for almost a week.

On a daily timeframe, RSI is approaching 91, the highest reading since 1987. The market was almost as hot in recent years in January 2018 and April 2015. In both cases, it fell for almost a year.

While this is a different case, and the multi-year sell-off in Chinese equities should be considered, the current overbought situation on daily timeframes could still be a good reason to shake out positions locally when the major Chinese markets open on 8 October.

Moreover, at current levels, the Hang Seng is approaching the 22500-resistance area, which has been in place since March 2022, and this will strengthen the resistance to growth in the short term.

However, one cannot overlook the more global picture emerging on the weekly timeframe. This week, the price has broken above the 200-week moving average after retreating from the 50-week average in early September.

This will potentially attract more capital and provide fuel for further upside. There is also a move into overbought territory (above 70) on the RSI, but past examples suggest further upside, and a sharp drop in the RSI to levels below 70 should be seen as a correction signal.

In the long term, a successful break of 22500 would open the door to 25000 and on to 30000, where we have seen major portfolio corrections in the past.

By the FxPro Analyst Team

Regulation: FCA (UK), SCB (The Bahamas)
read more
Dollar battles to maintain recent gains

Dollar battles to maintain recent gains

Trump uses tariffs as leverage to end the Ukraine-Russia conflict; Risk-on sentiment remains intact as earnings season picks up speed; US CPI report in focus, could cement a July Fed rate pause; Heavy profit-taking in cryptos; oil slides after testing key resistance;
XM Group | 15 minutes ago
China’s GDP Surprise Boosts Risk Currencies, CPI Eyed

China’s GDP Surprise Boosts Risk Currencies, CPI Eyed

China’s Q2 GDP surprise at 5.2% YoY sparked a positive reaction across global markets on July 15, 2025. Commodity currencies like AUD and NZD advanced modestly, while Gold hovered near $3,350 ahead of key U.S. CPI data. The Japanese Yen weakened despite safe-haven flows, as 10-year JGB yields hit their highest since 2008, highlighting BoJ-Fed policy divergence.
Moneta Markets | 35 minutes ago
USDJPY, GBPUSD, BTCUSD

USDJPY, GBPUSD, BTCUSD

US CPI may offer clues on Fed's next move; USDJPY points up; UK CPI expected to remain steady; GBPUSD tilts down; Bitcoin flies above 123,000; next target at 125,000
XM Group | 19h 43min ago