
Rate Of Return9 new stocks are coming at once, how to allocate funds

Three new stocks were listed again today, and I guess everyone is overwhelmed by the choices. I just spent some time organizing the subscription deadlines and fund release times for these 9 new stocks:

If you are using brokers like Fu X, Lao X, Hua X, etc., the red-marked parts allow seamless fund transitions. If you participated in the first two red-marked new stock subscriptions, after the funds are released, you can participate in the last three red-marked new stocks.
Funds used for red-marked new stocks cannot be used for blue-marked new stocks; and vice versa.
There are a few I plan to skip, namely Xidi Zhijia (margin too cold), BenQ Hospital (margin too cold), Nanhua Futures (A+H shares), and Easy Health (check the multiple on Wednesday night, skip if too low).
So my strategy this time is: focus on $ZHIHUI MINING(02546.HK), and use the remaining funds for Huaren and Impression Dahongpao. After Zhihui Mining funds return, focus on $HANXBIO-B(03378.HK), and use the rest for Nuobikan.
Just noticed, 4 more new stocks passed the hearing, and I guess new listings will come soon:

There’s a hot new U.S. stock MDLN that’s trending. For such trending U.S. stocks, it’s worth participating.
A few days ago, only Fu X could subscribe, but yesterday I found it on X Hu. U.S. IPO rules are different from Hong Kong’s—you can participate through multiple brokers simultaneously.
If you have U.S. IPO access on both brokers, you can participate through both; if only one, then use that one.
Due to the blind-box nature of U.S. IPOs, you can’t predict how many shares you’ll get in advance. For such hot U.S. stocks, $2,000 to $3,000 per account is enough.
Generally, U.S. stock allocations follow a "bountiful harvest" model—each subscriber gets 3 to 5 shares, fair and square. But sometimes, junk stocks might give you a pile, so control the total amount to avoid getting stuck with bad allocations.
Last time, Fu X allocated $2,100 worth of shares to every account that subscribed over $2,100 in a U.S. IPO. It surged, and people made tens of thousands that night, raising expectations for U.S. IPOs—but this isn’t the norm.
Today, A-shares dipped slightly, median gain -0.26%, 2,968 waiting to rise, 2,314 rising. Turnover dropped by 300 billion yuan, today’s turnover only 1.79 trillion. No A-share trades today.
Last Friday, U.S. stocks slumped: Nasdaq down 1.69%, S&P 500 down 1.07%. Today, Hong Kong market was the worst: Hang Seng Index down 1.34%, Hang Seng Tech down 2.48%, Hang Seng Healthcare $Bosera Hang Seng Health Care ETF(QDII)(513060.SH) down 3.66%, the shittiest star today.
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