MINIMA

MINIMAX-W 00100.HK Price

MINIMA
$0
+$0(0.00%)
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*Data last updated: 2026-05-11 17:03 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-11 17:03, MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA) is priced at $0, with a total market cap of --, a P/E ratio of 0.00, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $0 and $0. The current price is 0.00% above the day's low and 0.00% below the day's high, with a trading volume of --. Over the past 52 weeks, MINIMA has traded between $0 to $0, and the current price is 0.00% away from the 52-week high.

MINIMA Key Stats

P/E Ratio0.00
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Shares Outstanding0.00

MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA) FAQ

What's the stock price of MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA) today?

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MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA) is currently trading at $0, with a 24h change of 0.00%. The 52-week trading range is $0–$0.

What are the 52-week high and low prices for MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA)?

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What is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA)? What does it indicate?

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What is the market cap of MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA)?

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What is the most recent quarterly earnings per share (EPS) for MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA)?

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Should you buy or sell MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA) now?

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What factors can affect the stock price of MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA)?

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Hot Posts About MINIMAX-W 00100.HK (MINIMA)

GweiWatcher

GweiWatcher

05-06 13:32
I've noticed that many beginners in trading overlook one of the most reliable technical analysis patterns. We're talking about the head and shoulders pattern, which I’ve been using for several years, and here’s what I’ve realized: when this pattern forms correctly, the probability of a trend reversal becomes quite high. The structure of the head and shoulders pattern is actually very logical. First, after an upward trend, a local maximum appears—that's the left shoulder. Then the price bounces up and creates a higher point—that's the head of the pattern. After that, a third maximum forms, usually slightly below the head—that's the right shoulder. If you connect the lows between these three peaks, you'll get the so-called neckline, which can be either horizontal or slightly sloped. When I look for this pattern on charts, I always pay attention to a few points. First, the head and shoulders form exclusively in an uptrend, so there's no point in looking for it on falling assets. Second, you need to make sure there are indeed three maxima and two minima with proper geometry. And third, what is often overlooked is volume: usually, during the formation of the right shoulder, volume decreases, but when the price breaks the neckline, volume sharply increases—that’s a very important signal. Now, about practical trading. When the price breaks the neckline downward, it signals a reversal into a downtrend, and that’s exactly when I open a short position. I place the stop-loss slightly above the right shoulder to protect myself from false breakouts, which sometimes happen. To determine the target price, I take the distance from the top of the head to the neckline and project this distance downward from the breakout point. This results in a fairly precise level where the decline often halts. The main thing I’ve learned over years of trading is that the head and shoulders works best when you follow risk management rules and don’t rush into a trade. Wait for confirmation, check volume, set stops, and only then open a position. I see this pattern regularly on BTC, so if you watch the chart carefully, you can catch good moves.
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NotSatoshi

NotSatoshi

05-02 07:03
Recently, many people ask me how to combine all these ICT trading concepts into something practical. FVG, market structure, price behavior — it all sounds complicated, but honestly, once you understand the fundamentals, everything clicks. It starts with a daily bias that you build on the weekly chart. Here, you define IRL and ERL — meaning where the price should seek balance. It’s not magic, just basic market mechanics. Price always moves toward these zones, and every move on higher timeframes has its counterpart in the market maker model on lower timeframes. What interested me in ICT trading is how simple it is in theory, but how many details can be overlooked. Candle deviation is key — observe how the price reacts to the previous candle. If a high or low is shifted and the candle is engulfed, a reversal is coming. That’s a signal worth paying attention to. Then you move to the daily chart and repeat the same process. Ideally, weekly and daily charts align — then you have trades with the highest probability. If the daily isn’t clear, you wait. No rush. Just before entering a position, you switch to H4 and H1 to confirm the intraday structure. This is your direct map for day trading. It’s also important to understand TBL — time-based liquidity. Maxima and minima from specific time ranges are places where the price always pauses. On M15, you look for specific entries. You combine IRL/ERL with the reaction to TBL and the opening price. Here, three confirmations for entry come into play. First, a change in market structure on M15 — look for FVG on M1 to confirm your assumptions. Second, SMT divergence — when correlated assets break their correlation, a big move usually follows. Third, iFVG — if order flow isn’t respected at a key level, a reversal is imminent. All of this together creates a coherent ICT trading strategy that works because it’s based on how the market actually behaves. There are no indicators or magic formulas here. Just structure, liquidity, and price psychology. My advice? Take these concepts, apply them to your charts, and observe. Every market, every pair — the rules are the same. The more time you spend analyzing these patterns, the faster you’ll learn to recognize them. That’s the essence of ICT trading — simplicity combined with precision.
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