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贸易摩擦再起,短期震荡延续
Haitong Securities International· 2025-09-14 12:34
Group 1 - The report anticipates that A-shares will consolidate in September to digest previous gains, while Hong Kong stocks are expected to receive a short-term boost due to easing liquidity pressures and a stronger RMB [1][8] - A-shares experienced sharp volatility, with the SSE Composite Index up 1.5% and the ChiNext Index rising 2.1%, while Hong Kong stocks saw a catch-up rally driven by U.S. AI stocks, with the Hang Seng Index gaining 3.8% and the Hang Seng Tech Index up 5.3% [1][8] - Following dovish signals from Powell at Jackson Hole, gold rebounded over 9%, but U.S. inflation data confirmed rate-cut expectations, leading to gold entering a consolidation phase [2][9] Group 2 - The Ministry of Finance plans to pre-allocate part of the 2026 local government debt quota, indicating a more proactive approach compared to previous practices [3][10] - August financial data showed weak credit demand, highlighting the need for stronger policy support, while the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology introduced a growth stabilization plan for the auto sector [3][10] - In A-shares, tech stocks saw severe volatility at elevated levels, while real estate stocks strengthened, with a weekly increase of 6% following the easing of housing restrictions in major cities [4][11] Group 3 - Hong Kong stocks maintained stable liquidity, with HIBOR remaining stable and the RMB appreciating against the dollar, although potential dollar rebounds could weaken this support [5][11] - The AH premium index fell sharply to around 120 after adjustments, with significant southbound capital inflows, particularly into Alibaba, which attracted HKD 22 billion this week [5][11] - The report suggests that U.S. tech stocks rallied on strong Q3 earnings, driving rebounds in A-share tech and Hong Kong stocks, but warns that September trading is likely to remain choppy due to renewed U.S.-China trade frictions [6][13]