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基金研究周报:“东升西落”延续,A股分化加剧(9.1-9.5)
Wind万得· 2025-09-06 22:28
Market Overview - The A-share market exhibited a structurally differentiated pattern from September 1 to September 5, with policy-driven and capital rotation dominating sector performance. Major indices showed reduced volatility, with the ChiNext 50 index rising over 3%, while the STAR 50 index fell significantly by 5.42%. The CSI 500 and CSI 1000 indices declined by 1.85% and 2.59%, respectively, indicating overall liquidity pressure on small-cap stocks [2][3] - The Shanghai Composite Index fell by 1.18%, and the Shenzhen Index decreased by 0.83%, while the ChiNext Index increased by 2.35%. High dividend strategies faced dual pressure from weakened interest rate expectations and cyclical industry profit corrections, reflecting a shift of funds from "bond-like" assets to policy-sensitive small-cap stocks [2][3] Sector Performance - The average decline of Wind's first-level sectors was 0.80%, with 39% of the Wind Top 100 concept indices showing positive returns. Sectors such as electric equipment, comprehensive, and non-ferrous metals performed relatively well, rising by 7.39%, 5.38%, and 2.12%, respectively. Conversely, non-bank financials, computers, and defense industries showed significant weakness, declining by 4.96%, 7.27%, and 10.25% [2][3] Fund Issuance - A total of 38 funds were issued last week, including 23 equity funds, 11 mixed funds, and 4 bond funds, with a total issuance of 27.573 billion units [3][4] Fund Performance - The Wind All Fund Index fell by 0.29% last week. The ordinary equity fund index decreased by 0.30%, while the mixed equity fund index dropped by 0.60%. The bond fund index, however, rose by 0.05% [3][6] Global Market Overview - Global asset classes continued to show a "rising East and falling West" structural differentiation. U.S. stock indices showed mixed results, with the S&P 500 index slightly down, while the Nasdaq index rose over 1% due to the resilience of tech stocks. European markets faced political crises, leading to a lack of bullish sentiment among investors [4][6] - Asian markets displayed a "weak North and strong South" characteristic, with indices such as India's SENSEX30, Nikkei 225, and the Korean Composite all recording gains. The Hang Seng Index rose over 1%, with the semiconductor industry expected to be a core driver of market volatility [4][6] Domestic Bond Market Review - The overall sentiment in the bond market was stable last week, with the national bond futures index (CFFEX 10-year) rising by 0.12%. The short-end funding spread (R007-DR007) showed little significant change compared to the previous week, while medium to long-term rates remained low [11][12]