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The recent performance of the hard technology sector is indeed worth paying attention to. Commercial aerospace, innovative semiconductor equipment, CPO—these areas carry grand visions for future industrial upgrades, not just concepts that get hyped for a week or two and then fade away.
There is a cyclical logic behind this: the stock market is used to cultivate and support the hard technology industry, and the development of hard technology, in turn, provides genuine growth drivers for the stock market. This is the healthiest interaction model.
Looking at the non-ferrous metals sector, because of its international pricing power attribute, as long as global inflation expectations remain, it is easy to maintain a slow bull trend. Commercial aerospace, innovative semiconductors, CPO, and non-ferrous metals—these sectors have already laid out a sufficiently broad allocation framework for investors. Instead of adding seven or eight weak sectors, it’s better to master these main themes.
Of course, this is just a perspective and does not constitute investment advice.