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科技股再度强势 基金经理称A股结构性行情延续
Zheng Quan Shi Bao·2025-10-15 17:59

Market Overview - A-share market is experiencing a significant style switch as it approaches the end of the fourth quarter, with sectors like gold, non-ferrous metals, rare earths, coal, electricity, steel, and banking leading in performance since October, while previously high-performing sectors like AI, innovative pharmaceuticals, and batteries lag behind [1] - The market is in a high-level fluctuation, with a temporary cooling of investment sentiment in the technology sector, but a rebound occurred on October 15, with the Shanghai Composite Index returning to 3900 points, indicating continued strength in technology and new energy sectors [1] Structural Market Trends - Fund companies and analysts believe that A-shares will continue to exhibit structural trends, focusing on company valuations and fundamentals for mid to long-term investments, emphasizing the selection of high-quality companies with low expectations and valuations [1] - Recent market style shifts are driven by two short-term factors: changes in the external environment prompting a demand for risk aversion and the diminishing catalytic effect of previously rapid gains in the technology sector [1] Economic Indicators and External Environment - The technology and new energy sectors showed strong performance on October 15, supported by better-than-expected September import and export data, highlighting the resilience of China's foreign trade and reinforcing the long-term growth logic in sectors like new energy and smart equipment [2] - The U.S. Federal Reserve's recent comments suggest a weakening labor market and the possibility of interest rate cuts, which may support global liquidity and enhance risk appetite for A-shares [2] Investment Strategies - Analysts recommend focusing on high-growth sectors and cyclical sectors benefiting from economic recovery and "anti-involution" policies, with an emphasis on technology, new energy, and high-end manufacturing as key investment areas [2] - Investment strategies should balance between low-valuation blue-chip stocks (like banks and public utilities) and high-growth sectors (like semiconductors and high-end manufacturing), avoiding blind chasing of stocks with excessive prior gains and panic selling during market downturns [3] Long-term Outlook - The technology sector is expected to be a core area in the context of major power competition, driven by technological innovation and industrial policy, with structural opportunities in the TMT and high-end manufacturing sectors likely to persist [3] - The ongoing implementation of domestic demand expansion and "anti-involution" policies is anticipated to yield positive effects, benefiting consumer assets and leading cyclical assets as fundamental expectations improve [3]