During the Qingming holiday, it's not a "rest"; bond ETF tools such as Huaxia (511100) Treasury Bond ETF, Huaxia (511200) Credit Bond ETF, and Huaxia (551550) Sci-Tech Innovation Bond ETF are highlighted.

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Qingming holiday approaching, the A-share market will be closed, and many investors face a common dilemma: are idle funds in their accounts only able to “lie flat”? Actually not. Investors can focus on the combination of “Government Bond Reverse Repurchase + Bond ETF,” which allows them to enjoy “holiday rest, with earnings not stopping” even during market closure.

As a popular choice for pre-holiday financial management, government bond reverse repurchase relies on the backing of national credit, offering advantages such as high safety, flexible operation, and transparent returns. It is a high-quality tool for short-term appreciation of idle funds. On Thursday, operating government bond reverse repurchase will put funds in a “available but not withdrawable” state, which does not affect subsequent transactions and allows enjoying additional interest benefits. According to exchange rules, executing a 1-day government bond reverse repurchase on Thursday can accumulate interest covering the Qingming holiday for 4 days, effectively leveraging short-term operations for multi-day gains.

After unlocking reverse repurchase earnings, funds no longer need to be idle and can seamlessly connect with bond ETFs to achieve “relay” income. Before 3 p.m. on Friday, using the “available but not withdrawable” funds from reverse repurchase to buy bond ETFs, investors can simultaneously enjoy the 3-day bond coupon income during the Qingming holiday. Bond income consists of coupon payments plus price fluctuations, with coupons accrued daily. Even if the market is closed during the holiday, coupons will still accumulate normally and be paid out in a lump sum on the first trading day after the holiday.

The core advantage of this combination is “seamless connection and double interest stacking,” effectively solving the problem of idle funds during market closure. Bond ETFs support T+0 trading, meaning they can be bought and sold on the same day, with funds available immediately, allowing flexible switching with stocks and other assets, and capturing interest rate opportunities; additionally, bond ETFs feature low costs (no subscription or redemption fees, management and custody fees only 0.2%) and high transparency of holdings, making them a convenient tool for investors to grasp index rotation strategies.

Related ETFs: (1) Government Bond ETF Huaxia (511100) covers short, medium, long, and ultra-long-term government bonds, representing the overall government bond market and exhibiting characteristics of medium to long duration interest rate bonds. (2) Credit Bond ETF Huaxia (511200) focuses on central and state-owned enterprise bonds, with constituent bonds rated AAA, showing characteristics of medium-short duration credit bonds with a stable style. (3) Sci-Tech Innovation Bond ETF Huaxia (551550) focuses on a basket of high-growth Sci-Tech innovation company bonds, with large index market capacity and potential for yield exploration, overall presenting medium-short duration credit bond features.

Daily Economic News

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