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浙商证券浙商早知道-20250812
ZHESHANG SECURITIES·2025-08-11 23:30

Market Overview - On August 11, the Shanghai Composite Index rose by 0.34%, the CSI 300 increased by 0.43%, the STAR 50 climbed by 0.59%, the CSI 1000 went up by 1.55%, the ChiNext Index surged by 1.96%, and the Hang Seng Index gained 0.19% [3][4] - The best-performing sectors on August 11 were power equipment (+2.04%), communications (+1.95%), computers (+1.94%), electronics (+1.76%), and food and beverage (+1.45%). The worst-performing sectors included banking (-1.01%), oil and petrochemicals (-0.41%), coal (-0.35%), utilities (-0.31%), and transportation (-0.19%) [3][4] - The total trading volume for the A-share market on August 11 was 1,849.9 billion yuan, with net inflow from southbound funds amounting to 38.34 million Hong Kong dollars [3][4] Key Insights - The report indicates that the A-share market is currently experiencing its first "systematic slow bull" market in history. The long-term target for the Shanghai Composite Index is likely no longer limited to challenging the 3,674 high point, with a recommendation to focus on "large finance + pan-technology" sectors [5][6] - Since the initiation of the stock split reform in April 2005, the A-share market has undergone four bull markets, with the first three being "systematic bull markets" characterized by steep upward slopes. The fourth was a "structural bull market" with a more gradual increase, driven primarily by capital market reforms and liquidity easing [5][6] - The report suggests that the market began a long-term bottoming process in 2024, with a strong market performance following April 7, 2025, marking the start of the fifth bull market in A-share history. The current "systematic slow bull" is driven by improved risk appetite and declining risk-free interest rates, alongside China's rise and advantages, creating a "slow" bull market structure [5][6] Sector Focus - The report emphasizes a focus on sectors with external advantages and improving prosperity, such as innovative pharmaceuticals and new energy, as well as defensive sectors that serve as "ballast," particularly banks [6]