- The three major indices of China's A-share market collectively fluctuated and declined in the morning session, with the STAR 50 Index leading the decline among major broad-based indices with a drop of 3.63%. Over 4,500 stocks across the market fell, indicating that the valuation of growth stock-heavy sectors is facing short-term correction pressure.
- Market liquidity showed signs of marginal tightening, with the total market turnover reaching 1.7953 trillion yuan by midday, a decrease of 108.9 billion yuan compared to the previous trading day. Funds exhibited a certain degree of caution at key technical levels.
- Specific defensive and policy-driven sectors such as oil and gas energy and humanoid robots rose against the trend. The S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production Retail Equal Weight Index ETF (513350:SH) surged by 3.29%, forming a stark structural divergence with the deep adjustments in the chip and non-ferrous metals sectors.
Equity Market Under Pressure and Marginal Liquidity Contraction
As of the midday close on June 8, 2026, the Shanghai Composite Index (000001:SH) fell by 1.26%, the Shenzhen Component Index (399001:SZ) dropped by 2.49%, and the ChiNext Index (399006:SZ) declined by 2.83%. From the market perspective, stocks across both exchanges showed a general correction trend, with the STAR 50 Index, concentrated in technology growth stocks, being the most significantly pressured due to substantial previous gains. In terms of trading volume, the half-day trading scale of 1.79 trillion yuan showed a significant contraction compared to the previous trading day. This volume contraction indicates that as major indices reach upper resistance zones, the willingness of bulls to chase higher has weakened, and some profit-taking has exerted a stepwise suppression on the market, causing indices to probe lower in waves.
Energy Cycle and Intelligent Manufacturing Exhibit Safe-Haven Attributes
Amid a generally cautious market sentiment, defensive sectors like cyclical energy and humanoid robots with long-term policy catalysts have become important destinations for safe-haven funds. In the oil and gas energy sector, the S&P Oil & Gas ETF (513350:SH) surged by 3.29%, leading the market, while the CCB Energy & Chemical ETF (159981:SZ) recorded a 1.90% gain. Meanwhile, the E Fund CSI Robotics ETF (159530:SZ) in the high-end manufacturing chain rose by 2.76%. This performance reflects that some funds are shifting from high-valuation growth sectors to cyclical stocks supported by physical assets and intelligent hardware sectors with clear industrial progress. Additionally, the performance of the large financial sector, particularly bank ETFs, was also stable, with the Bosera CSI Bank ETF (159887:SH) recording a nearly 1% gain, playing a significant role in stabilizing the market during the index decline.
Semiconductors and Industrial Metals Face Deep Corrections
In contrast to the strong performance of the energy sector, previously active sectors like technology chips, non-ferrous metals, and precious metals such as gold faced concentrated selling during the day. The STAR Chip Design ETF (588780:SH) plummeted by 4.97%, and the Huatai-PineBridge China-Korea Semiconductor ETF (513310:SH) fell by 4.84%, indicating that the semiconductor industry chain is experiencing a marginal downward revision in risk appetite amid macro demand cycles and external disturbance expectations. The industrial non-ferrous sector was not spared either, with products like the ChinaAMC CSI Non-ferrous Metals ETF (516650:SH) experiencing declines of over 4.4%. Analysts point out that the short-term volatility in commodity prices and the demand for profit-taking have intertwined, causing stocks in the industrial metals and gold industries, which are highly sensitive to fundamentals, to undergo severe asset price revaluation in the short term.
Cross-Asset Linkage Perspective and Future Risk Variables
From a broader cross-asset linkage perspective, today's structural adjustment in the A-share market is closely related to changes in global macro factors. The phase strengthening of the US dollar index and local fluctuations in commodity prices have directly transmitted to the domestic non-ferrous metals and gold sectors. If subsequent core inflation data rebounds, prompting overseas central banks to adopt a more hawkish policy stance, the global asset pricing model may face further revaluation, thereby constraining the valuation ceiling of domestic growth stocks. Whether the entire market can stabilize and rebound in the future still requires close attention to changes in trading volume. In the current environment, investors are hedging macro uncertainties by increasing allocations to low-volatility dividend assets and industrial sectors with clear technological progress.