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Bo Yang, Director of Dacheng International Business Department, first public offering Dacheng Hong Kong stock selection is issued on April 15

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After the valuation of A shares has risen sharply, in 2021, Hong Kong stocks in the moderate valuation area will be favored by funds from the south. It is reported that Dacheng Hong Kong Stock Selected Mixed Fund (QDII) (code: Class A 011583, Class C 011584) under Dacheng Fund has been put on sale on April 15. This fund is personally helmed by Bo Yang, the director of Dacheng International Business Department and the research director of Dacheng Fund’s cross-border team. Bo Yang has lived in Hong Kong for 22 years, managed cross-border assets of more than 10 billion Hong Kong dollars, and has invested in Hong Kong stocks for more than 10 years. He is very close to the Hong Kong stock market and is familiar with global liquidity. Bo Yang had academic experience. After graduating from the Junior Class of the University of Science and Technology of China, he was the youngest assistant professor at the Business School of the University of Hong Kong. Later, he moved to the financial market and became the youngest Asia-Pacific and emerging market strategist at Morgan Stanley. Bo Yang’s investment framework is a combination of top-down and bottom-up. It has a global perspective, is good at asset allocation and selected individual stocks. It has previously won the Overseas Golden Bull Award twice (awarding institution: China Securities Journal; time: 2018 August 3, 2019, December 27).

22 years of residence in Hong Kong in the first round of public offerings

Bo Yang, Director of International Business Department of Dacheng Fund and Research Director of Dacheng Fund’s Cross-border Team. Born in the Junior Class of the University of Science and Technology of China, PhD in Finance from the University of Hong Kong, with more than 10 years of experience in Hong Kong stock investment management, he has won the China Securities Journal’s second and third overseas fund golden bull awards for two consecutive years.

According to the data, Bo Yang joined Dacheng Fund in 2015, and since March 2018, he has served as the investment manager of the first batch of Southbound Stock Connect commissioned portfolios of the National Social Security Fund. Prior to this, he has been in contact with institutional investors that dominate the Hong Kong market for a long time during more than 20 years of cross-industry experience in academia, research, and investment, including large global sovereign funds, large foreign long position funds, hedge funds, and Chinese and domestic investors. He has a strong grasp of his style preference; at the same time, he has a deep understanding of global liquidity and plays an important role in investing in Hong Kong, a capital market where the currency is directly linked to the US dollar.

As Bai Yang said, in the Hong Kong stock market, “the one who does not seek the overall situation is not enough to seek a domain.” Only from the forest of global assets can we see the specific tree of Hong Kong stocks clearly.

At present, Bo Yang manages a number of cross-border special account products, with a total asset scale of more than 10 billion yuan, of which the equity product management scale is about 5 billion yuan, which is mainly invested in Hong Kong stocks.

Deeply research individual stocks and focus on risks

Markets often underreact to the beginning of long-term structural changes and overreact to short-term events. Relying on the long-term market strategy research experience of top investment banks, Bo Yang is good at accurately grasping the direction in the early stage of major macro-trends, and capturing the drift of market winds and the formation of large-scale investment themes. Different from the mainstream of the market, Bo Yang’s stock selection is based on top-down, and the investment style remains open. It does not exclude any asset in growth, value, or cycle, nor is it limited to one or certain industries. The existing management investment targets range from the “old economy” to the “new economy”, from consumption, finance, real estate to health care, and information technology, covering all industries in the entire market.

Bo Yang believes that investment should maintain an open mind, not set limits on oneself, and not antagonize growth and value. For long-term management institutions (including social security funds) special accounts, Bo Yang’s investment style is a bit of an absolute return style, so he attaches great importance to risk control and dislikes large drawdowns, because drawdowns are directly related to the speed of returning to net worth. Bo Yang emphasized: Going air is not a risk, but losing money is!

Bo Yang Investment is mainly held in the medium and long term. Only in a few extreme cases will significant position adjustments and style switching be carried out. Bai Yang believes,

Accurately grasp the market trend, dare to grasp the turning point and concentrate on trading

Bo Yang’s investment framework is a combination of top-down and bottom-up, and tends to be top-down: judge the status quo of macroeconomic and monetary and fiscal policies, and then observe the expectations of the capital market, valuations, and valuations of various sectors , Earnings growth rate, selection of countries, regions and industries with the best price/performance ratio, and finally stock selection based on in-depth bottom-up individual stock research. There are more choices of industries and styles, and fewer choices. There are exceptions only when the market is in extreme valuation and sentiment situations. This is consistent with the results of the academic analysis of fund performance, that is, the vast majority of investment returns come from asset allocation, followed by stock selection, and very few come from timing. The difference between a top-down investment framework and a purely bottom-up framework is that the former can simultaneously obtain the benefits of style selection and sector rotation in asset allocation.

Bai Yang said that if he judges that the market valuation level or style rotation is close to an important turning point, he will do long and concentrated transactions. In addition, his investment is mainly based on steady and slow substitution, and the overall annual turnover rate of the investment portfolio is not high.

He believes that benefiting from the dual changes in the size and structure of Hong Kong stocks and the valuation of Hong Kong stocks dragged down by the global epidemic last year, Hong Kong stocks will most likely outperform A shares in 2021. In terms of volume, Hong Kong stocks have been active in IPOs, and their volume has continued to increase. At present, it is almost half the value of the A stock market, and has ranked among the top three in total global IPO value for two consecutive years. Structurally, due to the differences in the listing rules between Hong Kong and the Mainland, the Hong Kong stock market has gathered a large number of extremely dynamic TMT and biomedical companies. He believes that Hong Kong stocks are very likely to become the Chinese version of Nasdaq in the future. According to the GICS industry classification, the proportion of the “new economy” component of the Hong Kong stock Hang Seng Index in the total market value has increased from 16% five years ago to 39% at present. In addition, Hong Kong stocks have recently benefited from the return of China’s concept stocks, looking high.

In terms of general allocation, he pays attention to “three U assets” (Under-loved, Under-owned and Undervalued), that is, stocks that people don’t like, are seldom held by institutional investors, and are deeply undervalued. He believes that this type of There are good medium and long-term investment opportunities hidden in stocks.

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