算力行情迈向新高,基金经理:需警惕估值风险
Zheng Quan Shi Bao·2025-09-18 13:56

Group 1 - The A-share computing power sector experienced a "deep V" trend in September, with a nearly 10% pullback at the beginning of the month, followed by a strong rebound driven by positive news, pushing the cloud computing index towards historical highs [1][2] - A significant deal was reported on September 10, where OpenAI and Oracle finalized a $300 billion computing power purchase order, marking one of the largest collaborations in the cloud computing industry, reflecting strong global demand for high-performance computing infrastructure [2] - The computing power market has also positively impacted the Hang Seng Internet sector, with companies like Alibaba and Baidu adopting self-developed chips to replace Nvidia GPUs, leading to a surge in semiconductor equipment orders [3] Group 2 - There is a sustained global capital investment in computing power, with a "arms race" in computing power becoming a long-term consensus among tech giants and industrial capital, providing solid demand support for the computing power chain [5] - The domestic computing power supply issues have shifted from external to internal factors, with previous overseas supply constraints easing, and the approval process for IDC energy consumption indicators closely tied to policy guidance [5] - From a long-term investment perspective, the focus on self-controllable directions is seen as having significant long-term value and growth potential, with the computing power sector expected to benefit from the explosion of domestic demand and industrial upgrades [6] Group 3 - The computing power sector is expected to see exponential demand growth driven by breakthroughs in AI models and rapid deployment of AI applications, with specific investment opportunities in GPU and ASIC chips, optical modules, and emerging fields like AI servers [7] - Despite the long-term positive outlook, the cloud computing sector is currently considered "not cheap," with a price-to-earnings ratio of 122 as of September 17, placing it in the 91.8% percentile over the past five years [9] - Some fund managers have begun to reduce positions in response to market volatility, indicating a cautious approach as the sector enters a period of fluctuation after significant gains [9]