Hunting Dark Horses (猎杀黑马) — Complete Implementation Specification
Author: Wang Ning (王宁)
Original Language: Chinese (Simplified)
Market Focus: A-shares (Shanghai & Shenzhen Stock Exchanges)
Trading Style: Proactive identification and early positioning in undiscovered stocks before major moves
Table of Contents
Core Philosophy
Defining the Dark Horse
Technical Screening Framework
Volume Anomaly Detection
Institutional Footprint Analysis
Sector Rotation and Thematic Hunting
Fundamental Catalysts
Chart Pattern Recognition
Entry Timing Techniques
Position Building Strategy
Risk Management Framework
Holding Period Management
Exit Strategy
The Dark Horse Lifecycle
Key Quotes and Principles
1. Core Philosophy
In the Chinese stock market lexicon, a "dark horse" (黑马) is a stock that no one expects to perform well but then delivers outsized returns. Wang Ning's approach is to systematically identify these stocks before the crowd catches on, using a combination of technical anomalies, volume analysis, and institutional behavior detection.
The philosophy rests on an asymmetric information model:
- Informed money acts first, talks later. Institutional accumulation leaves footprints in the data before any public narrative forms.
- The crowd is always late. By the time a stock is widely discussed on forums and in media, 60-80% of the move is complete.
- Dark horses are made, not born. They are the result of deliberate, patient accumulation by smart money. The patterns are identifiable if you know where to look.
- Early positioning requires patience. You may need to hold through noise and uncertainty before the stock's move begins.
2. Defining the Dark Horse
2.1 Quantitative Characteristics
A dark horse candidate typically shows:
| Characteristic |
Range |
| Market capitalization |
Small to mid-cap (1-20 billion RMB) |
| Average daily volume |
Below sector average (quiet stock) |
| Price position |
30-60% below its all-time high |
| Analyst coverage |
Low (0-3 analysts covering) |
| Recent media mentions |
Minimal |
| Price change last 6 months |
Between -10% and +15% (flat / unnoticed) |
2.2 Qualitative Characteristics
- The company has a viable business with improving fundamentals, but the improvement has not yet been recognized by the market
- There may be an upcoming catalyst: new product, policy tailwind, sector rotation, restructuring
- The stock is not in anyone's "top picks" list and is generally ignored
- Ownership data shows quiet accumulation by funds or key shareholders
2.3 What a Dark Horse Is Not
- Not a falling knife with no fundamental support
- Not a heavily shorted stock hoping for a squeeze
- Not a micro-cap penny stock with no liquidity
- Not a stock already up 100% that you missed — that is a discovered horse, not a dark horse
3. Technical Screening Framework
3.1 Stage Analysis Foundation
Wang Ning adapts a stage analysis framework to identify dark horses in the transition from Stage 1 (basing) to Stage 2 (advancing):
- Stage 1: Stock is in a long, flat base after a decline. Moving averages are converging. Volume is declining. This is the hunting ground.
- Stage 2: Stock begins to advance, clearing resistance. Moving averages turn up. Volume expands. The dark horse is now running.
- Stage 3: Stock tops out. Moving averages flatten. Distribution begins. The dark horse is being sold to latecomers.
- Stage 4: Stock declines. Avoid completely.
3.2 Primary Screen Criteria
# Dark Horse Primary Screen
price > 5.0 # exclude ultra-low-price stocks
market_cap between 1_billion and 20_billion
avg_volume_20 > 500_000 # minimum liquidity
price_change_120_days between -0.15 and 0.15 # flat base
ma20_slope between -0.001 and 0.003 # flat or slightly rising
ma60 near ma120 (within 5%) # moving averages converging
atr_20 / price < 0.03 # low volatility (compressed)
3.3 Secondary Filters
After the primary screen, apply:
- The stock should have at least 60 days of consolidation
- Daily ranges are contracting (Bollinger Bands narrowing)
- The stock has not made a new 52-week low in the past 30 days
- Price is above or at the 250-day MA (not in a structural downtrend)
4. Volume Anomaly Detection
Volume anomalies are the earliest footprint of institutional interest. Smart money cannot accumulate a meaningful position without leaving traces in volume data.
4.1 Types of Volume Anomalies
Quiet Accumulation Pattern (温和放量)
- Volume gradually increases over 5-10 days while price barely moves or drifts slightly higher
- Each day's volume is 20-50% above the prior day
- This slow crescendo indicates patient buying by large accounts
Spike-and-Retreat Pattern (脉冲放量)
- Sudden volume spike (3-5x average) on a single day with moderate price movement (2-4%)
- Volume immediately returns to normal levels the next day
- This "pulse" suggests a large block trade or institutional buy program
- If this pattern repeats 2-3 times over several weeks, it is strong evidence of accumulation
Volume-Price Divergence (量价背离)
- Stock makes new lows in price, but volume on down days is declining
- Sellers are exhausted; supply is drying up
- Combined with steady or rising volume on up days — asymmetric demand
4.2 On-Balance Volume (OBV) Analysis
If OBV is rising while price is flat:
-> Smart money is accumulating (BULLISH)
If OBV is flat while price is flat:
-> No one cares about this stock yet (NEUTRAL — too early)
If OBV is declining while price is flat:
-> Distribution is occurring (BEARISH — avoid)
4.3 Volume Ratio Indicator
volume_ratio = sum(volume on up days, 20 days) / sum(volume on down days, 20 days)
if volume_ratio > 1.5: strong accumulation signal
if volume_ratio between 1.0 and 1.5: mild accumulation
if volume_ratio < 1.0: distribution — avoid
5. Institutional Footprint Analysis
5.1 Shareholder Concentration
A-share companies report their top 10 shareholders quarterly. Track:
- Declining number of shareholders over consecutive quarters indicates accumulation (fewer people hold more shares)
- Increasing average position size per shareholder
- New fund appearances in the top 10 shareholder list
- Lock-up expiry dates — if large shareholders are not selling after lock-up expires, this is bullish
5.2 Dragon-and-Tiger List (龙虎榜)
The exchanges publish institutional buying/selling data for stocks that hit price limits or show unusual activity:
- Identify stocks where institutional seats are net buyers
- Repeated appearances of the same institutional buyer over multiple sessions
- Net institutional buying > net retail selling
5.3 Block Trade Analysis (大宗交易)
Block trades occur off-exchange and are reported after hours:
- Premium block trades (above closing price) indicate urgency from buyers — bullish
- Discount block trades (below closing price) are common but become bullish if the buyer is a known institutional account
- Frequency of block trades increasing while price is flat suggests accumulation
5.4 Margin Balance Trends
- Rising margin (融资) balance while price is flat indicates leveraged buying at the base
- Track margin balance as a percentage of free float — increasing percentage is a footprint
6. Sector Rotation and Thematic Hunting
6.1 Sector Rotation Model
The A-share market follows recognizable rotation patterns:
- Early cycle: Financials, infrastructure, real estate lead
- Mid cycle: Manufacturing, consumer, technology lead
- Late cycle: Resources, materials, defensive sectors lead
- Risk-off: Utilities, consumer staples, gold
Dark horses are most often found in sectors that are about to rotate into favor. The stock has been ignored because its sector has been out of favor, but smart money anticipates the rotation.
6.2 Policy-Driven Themes
The A-share market is heavily influenced by government policy:
- New five-year plan priorities
- Industry subsidy announcements
- Regulatory changes (both tightening and loosening)
- "National champion" designations
Dark horses often emerge from newly favored policy sectors. Identify the policy theme early, then screen for dark horse characteristics within that sector.
6.3 Sector Relative Strength Transition
Monitor sectors transitioning from relative weakness to relative strength:
sector_rs = sector_return_20d / market_return_20d
if sector_rs was < 0.8 (lagging) last month
and sector_rs is now > 0.95 (catching up):
-> This sector is transitioning; look for dark horses within it
7. Fundamental Catalysts
While the primary approach is technical, fundamental catalysts provide conviction for longer holding periods.
7.1 Earnings Inflection
- Revenue growth accelerating after 2+ quarters of deceleration
- Profit margins expanding due to operational leverage or input cost decline
- First profitable quarter after a string of losses
7.2 Asset Revaluation
- Company holds land, patents, or assets that are undervalued on the balance sheet
- Pending asset injection from parent company (common in A-shares)
- Spin-off or restructuring that unlocks hidden value
7.3 Competitive Position Improvement
- Competitor exits the market or faces regulatory trouble
- New product gaining market share
- Technology breakthrough or patent grant
7.4 Capital Events
- Share buyback program announcement
- Key insider buying (directors, senior management)
- Strategic investor taking a stake
8. Chart Pattern Recognition
8.1 The Long Base (长期底部)
- Duration >= 120 trading days
- Price range <= 20%
- Volume declining throughout
- Moving averages have fully converged
- This is the highest-conviction dark horse pattern
8.2 The Cup-and-Handle (杯柄形态)
- A rounded bottom (cup) followed by a brief, shallow pullback (handle)
- The handle should retrace no more than 1/3 of the cup's depth
- Volume declines through the handle
- Breakout from the handle on expanding volume triggers entry
8.3 The Ascending Triangle (上升三角形)
- Flat resistance with rising support (higher lows)
- Volume declines as the triangle narrows
- Breakout above flat resistance on volume surge
- Target: height of the triangle projected upward from breakout
8.4 The Volatility Squeeze (波动率收缩)
- Bollinger Bandwidth at its narrowest reading in 120+ days
- Price contained in a very tight range
- This is a coiled spring — the direction of the breakout will be explosive
- Combined with other dark horse signals, the direction is likely upward
9. Entry Timing Techniques
9.1 The Volume Trigger Entry
Enter when the first significant volume expansion occurs from the base:
- Volume >= 2x the 20-day average
- Price closes up >= 3% on the day
- This is the "waking up" signal
- Buy at the close or the next morning's open
9.2 The Breakout Entry
Enter when price clears the top of the base/consolidation range:
- Price closes above the defined resistance
- Volume confirms (>= 1.5x average)
- Follow standard breakout entry rules (see companion book "过顶擒龙")
9.3 The Early Accumulation Entry (Highest Risk, Highest Reward)
Enter within the base itself, before the breakout, based on accumulation evidence:
- Multiple volume anomalies detected over the past 30 days
- Institutional footprint signals are present
- Fundamental catalyst is identified
- Buy at the current price, accept that timing may be early
- Use a wider stop (below the base low) and smaller position size
9.4 Entry Priority Matrix
| Evidence Level |
Entry Timing |
Position Size |
Stop Width |
| Volume + Institutional + Fundamental |
Early (in base) |
15-20% |
Wide (below base) |
| Volume + Technical breakout |
Breakout |
20-25% |
Moderate (below breakout) |
| Technical breakout only |
Breakout + pullback |
10-15% |
Tight (below resistance) |
10. Position Building Strategy
10.1 Pyramiding Model
Dark horse positions are built gradually to manage the uncertainty inherent in early-stage identification:
- Initial position: 30-40% of the planned full position
- First add: When the stock confirms the breakout (+5% from entry), add 30%
- Second add: On the first successful pullback that holds support, add the final 30%
- Total build time: typically 10-30 trading days
10.2 Cost Averaging Within the Base
For early accumulation entries:
- Split the initial 30-40% into 3 separate buys over 2-4 weeks
- Buy on down days within the base (accumulate when price dips to support)
- Average cost should be in the lower half of the base range
10.3 Maximum Position Limits
- No single dark horse position > 25% of portfolio
- No more than 3 dark horse positions simultaneously
- Keep at least 30% of capital in cash or liquid positions
11. Risk Management Framework
11.1 Stop-Loss Levels
| Entry Type |
Stop Level |
Maximum Loss |
| Early accumulation (in base) |
Below the base low by 3% |
10-12% |
| Breakout entry |
Below resistance by 3% |
5-8% |
| Pullback entry |
Below the pullback low |
3-5% |
11.2 Portfolio Risk Rules
- Maximum loss on any single position: 3% of total portfolio value
- If 2 dark horse positions hit stops in the same week, pause new entries for 10 trading days
- If the market index drops below its 60-day MA, reduce all dark horse positions by 50%
11.3 Fundamental Stop
If the fundamental thesis is invalidated (earnings miss, management change, regulatory action), exit immediately regardless of price level.
11.4 Time-Based Risk Management
- If a dark horse shows no sign of movement after 60 trading days of holding, reassess the thesis
- If the stock is still within its base after 90 days and no new positive signals have appeared, exit and redeploy capital
12. Holding Period Management
12.1 The Patience Phase (Weeks 1-4)
- The dark horse may still be in its base
- Volume anomalies should continue or intensify
- No significant price movement expected yet
- Key task: monitor for thesis invalidation signals
12.2 The Awakening Phase (Weeks 4-8)
- The stock begins to show life: rising volume, minor breakouts
- Moving averages begin to turn up
- Media or analyst coverage may begin to appear
- Consider adding to the position if the thesis is confirmed
12.3 The Running Phase (Weeks 8-20)
- The dark horse is now widely recognized
- Price is advancing with momentum
- Volume is consistently above average
- Begin taking profits according to the exit strategy
- Tighten stops aggressively
12.4 The Mature Phase (Beyond Week 20)
- The stock is now fully discovered — no longer a dark horse
- Analyst coverage is at its peak
- Retail participation is high (social media buzz)
- Exit all remaining positions — the easy money has been made
13. Exit Strategy
13.1 Profit Targets
- Minimum target: 30% gain from average cost (take 1/3 of position)
- Standard target: 50% gain (take another 1/3)
- Maximum target: Let the final 1/3 run with a trailing stop at the 20-day MA
13.2 Distribution Signals (Exit Triggers)
Exit the position when you observe:
- Climax volume: Volume >= 5x average on a single day at new highs
- Wide-range reversals: Large intraday range with a bearish close at highs
- Media saturation: The stock is being discussed everywhere
- Analyst upgrades after a big move: Wall Street upgrades are often sell signals
- Insider selling: Management or major shareholders filing to sell
13.3 Trailing Stop System
function trail_stop(position, current_price, ma10, ma20):
gain = (current_price - position.avg_cost) / position.avg_cost
if gain >= 0.50:
return max(position.stop, ma10)
elif gain >= 0.30:
return max(position.stop, ma20)
elif gain >= 0.15:
return max(position.stop, position.avg_cost * 1.05)
elif gain >= 0.05:
return max(position.stop, position.avg_cost)
else:
return position.stop
14. The Dark Horse Lifecycle
Understanding where a dark horse is in its lifecycle is critical for timing:
Phase 1: Gestation (孕育期)
├── Smart money begins quiet accumulation
├── Volume anomalies first appear
├── Price: flat, in base
├── Duration: 2-6 months
└── Action: Identify and take initial position
Phase 2: Birth (启动期)
├── First meaningful breakout from base
├── Volume expansion confirms institutional buying
├── Price: breaks above base, gains 10-20%
├── Duration: 2-4 weeks
└── Action: Add to position, confirm thesis
Phase 3: Growth (成长期)
├── Sustained uptrend with strong volume
├── Analyst coverage begins
├── Price: trending higher, 20-50% from base
├── Duration: 1-3 months
└── Action: Hold core, take partial profits
Phase 4: Maturity (成熟期)
├── Everyone knows the story
├── Climax volume and wide ranges
├── Price: 50-100%+ from base
├── Duration: 2-4 weeks
└── Action: Exit systematically
Phase 5: Decline (衰退期)
├── Smart money has exited
├── Retail holds the bag
├── Price: declining from peak
└── Action: Completely out, never look back
16. Key Quotes and Principles
"The dark horse hides in the shadows of the market, ignored by all. Your advantage is patience — the patience to search where others will not look."
"Volume whispers before price shouts. Learn to hear the whisper, and you will be positioned before the shout."
"A declining shareholder count is the clearest sign that strong hands are gathering shares from weak ones. This is the footprint of the hunter becoming the hunted."
"Do not mistake a dying company for a dark horse. A dark horse is dormant, not dead. Always verify that the business underneath the chart is alive and improving."
"The best dark horses are found in sectors that are rotating from weakness to strength. Yesterday's laggard is tomorrow's leader."
"Patience is the dark horse hunter's greatest weapon and greatest challenge. You may hold for weeks with nothing happening. That silence is the price of positioning."
"When the dark horse finally runs and everyone is talking about it, your job is done. Sell your shares to the latecomers who just discovered what you found months ago."
"Three volume anomalies in a quiet stock within thirty days is not coincidence. It is a message from the market: someone knows something you do not yet know."
"Never fall in love with a dark horse that refuses to run. If ninety days pass without movement, free your capital for the next hunt."
This specification synthesizes the core methodology from "猎杀黑马" by Wang Ning, structured as an actionable implementation guide for proactive stock screening and early positioning in undiscovered winners in the A-share market.