ZEN is pumping because the chart just flipped from a long slow base into a clean 4H trend expansion.
What happened on the chart
ZEN spent a long time moving sideways and printing a flat base, with the older swing low marked around 8.388. When price compresses like that for weeks, it usually means supply is getting absorbed. Once the range breaks, the move often becomes fast because a lot of traders enter at the same time.
Why the pump is happening
First, ZEN broke out from a long consolidation and started making higher highs and higher lows on the 4H chart.
Second, the move accelerated after reclaiming key round levels like 10 and 12. Those levels attract momentum traders and trigger stop losses from late shorts.
Third, after a breakout from a long base, a short squeeze is common. Traders who short the range highs get forced to close as price keeps pushing, which adds fuel.
Fourth, the current run is strong enough to push ZEN into a new price zone, with the 24H high reaching 13.999 and price holding near 13.86 to 13.87.
Where we are now
ZEN is consolidating just under 14 after the first impulse. That is normal. Strong moves usually pause near a round number before the next leg.
Key levels to watch next
Immediate resistance is 13.999 to 14.00. A clean break and hold above 14 can open continuation.
First support zone is 13.20 to 13.40. If price holds here, the trend stays healthy.
Next support is 12.00 as a major round level and prior breakout area.
Deeper support is the 24H low area near 10.120.
Major base support remains around 8.388.
Bullish continuation idea
If ZEN holds above the 13.20 to 13.40 zone and reclaims 14 with strength, continuation becomes likely.
Pullback idea
If ZEN loses 13.20 and cannot reclaim it, a retrace toward 12 becomes likely. If 12 fails, the 10.12 area becomes the next support to watch.
Risk note
After a 36 percent daily move, volatility is high. Do not chase green candles. Wait for either a pullback hold or a confirmed breakout above 14.
Not financial advice. Always use risk management.
