New Concept Energy shares surge 21.2% intraday driven by positive technical indicators including MACD turning positive, momentum crossing above zero, and price crossing 50-day moving average.

Monday, Mar 2, 2026 10:51 am ET2min read
GBR--
think> Okay, let me try to work through this. The user wants me to transform a given Chinese text into a concise news headline following specific rules. The example provided shows the structure: company name, percentage change, time period, and a brief reason. First, the input text is about New Concept Energy intraday up 21.2%. The reasons listed are three technical indicators from 2026: MACD turned positive, momentum crossed above zero, and price crossed above 50-day MA. These are all technical analysis points. I need to make sure the percentage is rounded to two decimals. The input has 21.2%, which is already two decimal places, so that's good. The time period is intraday. The company name should remain as New Concept Energy. The reason should be a brief summary. The three points are about technical indicators. I can combine them into a sentence mentioning the MACD, momentum, and moving average crossover. The example uses "announcing that..." but here the company isn't announcing anything; it's the technical indicators. So maybe "due to positive technical indicators including..." or something like that. Wait, the example mentions the company's announcement. In this case, the company isn't making an announcement, but the price movement is due to technical indicators. So the reason should be phrased as "due to positive technical indicators including..." followed by the three points, but maybe not all three. The example included two points, but the user's input has three. Let me check the example again. In the example, the reason includes the subsidiary signing an agreement. Here, the reasons are three technical indicators. The user's instruction says "brief reason," so maybe pick the most significant ones. But the example included both MACD and momentum, and the third is the moving average. Maybe combine them into a concise statement. So the headline would be: New Concept Energy surged 21.20% intraday, due to positive technical indicators including a bullish MACD crossover on February 19, 2026, momentum above zero, and a price breakout above the 50-day moving average on February 24, 2026. Wait, the example uses "announcing that..." but here it's not an announcement. So the structure should be "due to..." or "as..." indicating the reason. Also, the dates are from 2026, which might be a typo since the current year is 2023, but the user provided the text as is. I have to include the dates as given. I need to check if all the numbers are correctly formatted. The percentage is 21.2%, which is 21.20% when rounded to two decimals. Wait, the input says 21.2%, which is one decimal place. The rules say to round to two decimal places, removing trailing zeros. So 21.2% becomes 21.20%? Wait, 21.2 is actually 21.20 when rounded to two decimals. But in the example, 4.230769% becomes 4.23%. So here, 21.2% is 21.20% when rounded to two decimals. But in the input, it's written as 21.2%, so maybe it's already two decimal places with a zero? Wait, 21.2% is 21.20% when rounded to two decimals. So the correct way is to write 21.20% but since the input is 21.2%, maybe the user intended it as one decimal place. Wait, the example shows that 4.230769% is rounded to 4.23%, so two decimal places. So 21.2% is actually 21.20% when rounded to two decimals. But the input says 21.2%, which is one decimal place. So perhaps the user made a mistake, but I should follow the rule and round to two decimals. So 21.2% becomes 21.20%? Wait, 21.2 is one decimal place. To round to two decimals, it's 21.20. But maybe the user intended 21.2% as already two decimals, but the input says 21.2%. Hmm. Maybe the input is 21.20% but written as 21.2% for brevity. So I should present it as 21.20% in the headline. Wait, but the example shows that 4.230769% becomes 4.23%, so two decimal places. So 21.2% would be 21.20% if it's 21.200.

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