During today's Asian trading session, there was a notable risk appetite resonance, with historical highs reached by the benchmark indices in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan setting a relatively mild liquidity environment for the Hong Kong stock market's early trading. Although the Hang Seng Index (HSI) started flat due to a wait-and-see attitude towards macroeconomic data, the forces of underlying industry cycles successfully segmented market funds. BlackRock (BLK:US), a leading global asset management institution, has a strategic bullish view on semiconductor and hardware stocks, which further strengthens the macro trend of shifting funds from inefficient cyclical assets to high-resilience AI assets. This cross-market consensus is reshaping the sector exposure weights of emerging market stock portfolios.
Cross-Asset Implications
The AI-driven tech boom is leaving a deep mark on global cross-asset pricing models. Under the macro assumptions of high oscillation in risk-free yield expectations, long-term funds are more inclined to pursue industry assets with high intrinsic growth potential to hedge against macro discount rate pressures. This capital flow is not only reflected in the structural strengthening of the chip manufacturing and optical communication sectors in the stock market but also indirectly affects the microstructure of the forex market. As overseas funds increase their allocation to core assets in the Asian semiconductor supply chain, currencies of related export-oriented economies may receive short-term support from capital inflows, demonstrating relative exchange rate resilience during the strong dollar cycle.
Valuation Opportunities and Beta Restoration
Despite surrounding markets frequently hitting new highs, the Hang Seng Tech Index (HSTECH) still shows a significant valuation discount compared to global tech indices. The rise of 0.56% in early trading and the strengthening of heavyweights like SMIC suggest that some macro hedge funds are implementing mean reversion strategies. With US tech giants at historical high valuation percentiles, Hong Kong's tech hardware and internet giants, with their lower P/E ratios and gradually improving free cash flow, provide a safer margin of allocation for global capital. If southbound funds continue to provide incremental liquidity, the process of correcting this valuation gap is expected to accelerate.
The Resonance of Macro Liquidity and Industry Themes
The current strength of tech stocks is not an isolated industry phenomenon but a result of the resonance between macro liquidity expectation adjustments and industry boom cycles. The cautious attitude of global central banks in weighing rate cut paths has led to insufficient confidence in a broad macroeconomic recovery, causing traditional cyclical stocks like oil and gas equipment and broad consumer stocks to be neglected. The pressure on consumer stocks like Sichuan Auntie is essentially an early pricing of a slowdown in macro disposable income expectations. In this dumbbell-shaped macro configuration strategy, funds inevitably group towards AI infrastructure fields with high visibility and not strongly constrained by traditional economic cycles.
Policy Marginal Observation and Tail Risk Monitoring
For the currently highly concentrated macro trade in tech hardware, the core vulnerability lies in the geopolitical game of the global semiconductor supply chain. Although the market is currently immersed in optimism about order growth and increased capacity utilization, macro analysts must continuously monitor potential changes in non-tariff barriers such as trade sanctions or technological blockades. If more stringent export control policies are introduced in the future, they could disrupt the current valuation logic of the hardware sector. Additionally, if global commodity prices surge unexpectedly due to geopolitical conflicts in the second half of the year, leading to an elevated inflation center, this could increase long-end rates and suppress valuations of long-duration tech assets.




