# compute hardware
Latest news and articles about compute hardware
Total: 5 articles found

Compute-Hardware Rally Lifts ChiNext While A‑Share Liquidity Sags
ChiNext rallied nearly 0.9% at mid‑day as compute‑hardware and storage‑chip stocks soared, even as the Shanghai Composite fell and market turnover shrank to RMB 1.24 trillion. The rally was narrow and tech‑led, highlighting a rotation into AI‑related infrastructure names amid low overall liquidity.

Compute‑Hardware Rally Lifts China’s A‑Shares as Broad Advance Sees Over 4,500 Stocks Rise
China’s A‑share market rallied with ChiNext and Shenzhen leading gains as compute‑hardware and related tech names pushed many mid‑caps to daily limits. The advance was broad but occurred on thinner turnover, suggesting a rotation that could be fragile without stronger trading volumes or policy clarity.

ChiNext Leads Midday Rally as Compute‑Hardware Names and PCBs Outperform; Oil & Gas Lags
China’s stock market saw a broad mid‑morning rally led by the ChiNext index, driven by gains in compute‑hardware themes including CPO and PCB names, while oil and gas stocks lagged. Market breadth was strong but turnover fell versus the prior session, indicating selective, cautious buying.

AI Infrastructure Rally Lifts Shenzhen Midday as Market Breadth Weakens
Midday trading in China saw a divergent market: Shenzhen’s index recovered to a modest gain driven by a concentrated rally in compute‑hardware and related industrial stocks, while broader market breadth weakened with most stocks in decline. Rising turnover and strong moves in PCB, CPO and liquid‑cooling server names reflect investor bets on AI and datacentre demand, even as lithium batteries and cinema chains cooled off.

A‑Shares Rally as Solar Supply Chain and AI Hardware Drive Broad Market Advance
A‑shares rallied on February 3 as photovoltaic supply‑chain stocks and AI/compute hardware names led gains, while overall market turnover contracted slightly. The advance was broad—nearly 4,900 stocks rose—but lower volume suggests the move may be more sentiment‑driven than conviction‑led.