
kitty_PHD
kitty_PHD
1. Macro news: The preliminary US September Markit Manufacturing PMI was slightly below expectations. Signals of slowing economic momentum have led the market to re-bet on the possibility of a Fed rate cut within the year, with the US dollar index falling and US Treasury yields declining, providing support for growth stocks. Industry news: Tech: NVIDIA and AMD saw their target prices raised by multiple institutions in pre-market trading, with AI server order demand remaining strong. Energy: Continued tensions in the Middle East have stabilized oil prices, leading to a slight rebound in the energy sector. Consumer: September retail data showed weak US consumer spending, putting pressure on retail stocks...
If you want to study the U.S. tech industry, you can't just look at one or two companies, because it's a massive system driven by policies, technology, capital, and consumer trends. Below, I'll break down the investment logic of this industry step by step, from macro to micro. Macro and Policies: The prosperity of U.S. tech doesn't exist in isolation; it's directly influenced by the macro environment and policies. Monetary Environment: Rising interest rates compress high-valuation tech stocks, while loose policies fuel imagination. Policy Support: Semiconductors have the CHIPS Act, and new energy and AI also enjoy subsidies and policy tilts. Regulatory Challenges: Antitrust and data privacy regulations are limiting the giants...
Why hasn't AMD shown its strength yet? Positioning issue: Nvidia is the absolute leader in AI GPUs with a clear narrative and high valuation. Intel is at a low point, pulled up by strategic capital, with a 'turnaround' story. AMD is stuck in the middle—its technology isn't as monopolistic as Nvidia's, and its valuation isn't as low as Intel's, lacking an 'extreme story' in the short term. The server GPU (MI300 series) has highlights in fundamentals and product cadence, but shipment volumes and market share growth are slow, making it hard to match Nvidia's H100/H200 in the short term...
TMT stands for Technology, Media, and Telecom, and has gradually expanded to include the internet, semiconductors, software, cloud computing, AI, entertainment content, 5G/6G, hardware equipment, etc. You can think of it as the most active and most likely to produce 'giants' sector in the U.S. stock market. Apple, Microsoft, Google, Meta, NVIDIA, Netflix... these are all representatives of TMT...
