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SHANGHAI: China and Hong Kong stocks rebounded on Tuesday after US President Donald Trump postponed a threat to strike Iran’s power grid, offering a brief lift to risk appetite even as investors stayed wary following Tehran’s denial that any talks had taken place.

China’s blue-chip CSI300 Index closed up 1.3 percent, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 1.8 percent. Hong Kong benchmark Hang Seng was up 2.8 percent.

Global markets regained some ground after Trump cited “productive” discussions with senior Iranian figures, though some gains were trimmed as Iran sent waves of missiles into Israel, dismissing Trump’s talk of negotiations as “fake news”.

Onshore equity performance has shown only a weak link to energy prices, and implied volatility on major A-share indexes is running below levels seen during the April 2025 flare-up in global trade tensions and beneath many overseas peers, said Lei Meng, China Equity Strategist at UBS. The brokerage said the recent “de-risking” phase may be nearing an end in the short term.

The selloff on Monday saw China and Hong Kong benchmarks drop more than 3 percent, their steepest declines since Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff shock last year, as the escalating Middle East conflict sparked a global rout.

The onshore and offshore energy indexes fell 1 percent and 2 percent, respectively, while non-ferrous metal shares rebounded, up 3.2 percent. Materials stocks in Hong Kong jumped more than 6 percent.

Defensive financial stocks rose 1.5 percent, led gains onshore, with bank shares up 2.1 percent.

Shares of WuXi AppTec jumped the most in eight months after the Chinese new-drug developer and manufacturer posted a higher annual profit.

Laopu Gold’s shares surged 16 percent, buoyed by strong 2025 financial results and an upbeat outlook. Tech majors listed in Hong Kong were up 1.3 percent.