Group 1 - Nvidia's Q4 performance has exceeded expectations, leading to a surge in AI hardware stocks in the A-share market, with semiconductor ETFs in China and South Korea nearing their daily limit up, and electricity-related ETFs rising by 3% and 2.9% respectively [1] - A significant shift is occurring where technology growth is increasingly reliant on physical assets, marking a departure from the previous dominance of financial assets over physical assets [2][3] - The HALO concept, which combines heavy assets with low obsolescence, is gaining traction, indicating a paradigm shift in investment strategies towards assets that are less susceptible to technological changes [2][3] Group 2 - The rise in physical asset values is driven by geopolitical tensions and resource nationalism, which have made these assets more valuable as a safe haven compared to software and light asset industries [4] - The South Korean stock market has seen unprecedented growth, with the composite index surpassing 6000 points for the first time and achieving a year-to-date increase of 49.67% [4][5] - A-share market trends reflect a similar "physical asset supremacy," with significant gains in sectors such as construction materials, non-ferrous metals, and petrochemicals [7] Group 3 - ETFs with high physical asset content have dominated the performance charts, with several indices, including semiconductor and oil and gas resources, showing gains of over 25% year-to-date [10] - In the first two trading days of the year, A-share financing clients purchased a total of 57.5 billion yuan, indicating strong capital inflow into physical assets [13] - The top sectors for net buying include electronics, non-ferrous metals, and power equipment, highlighting investor interest in HALO stocks [17][18] Group 4 - High inflows into HALO-focused ETFs have been observed, with significant net purchases in gold, semiconductor materials, and electricity equipment ETFs [20] - The macroeconomic environment is favoring heavy asset industries, as manufacturing PMI has rebounded, surpassing service sector PMI [22] - Tech giants are projected to spend approximately $1.5 trillion on capital expenditures from 2023 to 2026, with $650 billion expected this year alone, indicating a strong focus on infrastructure investments [22]
突然爆了!老登资产席卷全球
Ge Long Hui A P P·2026-02-26 08:41