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China shares steady as energy and defence shares surge, offsetting airline losses; HK drops

China's equity benchmarks remained unchanged on Monday, as the Iran conflict prompted a surge in gold and energy stocks. This was offset by a decline in tourism and airline shares.

The Mainland's sentiment was boosted by the expectation that Beijing would step in and stabilize?markets?ahead of an upcoming parliamentary meeting.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell by about 2%, but it is more sensitive to volatility on the global markets.

U.S.-Israeli strikes against Iran killed the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei over the weekend. This heightened geopolitical tensions, and exacerbated global economic uncertainty.

The Shanghai Composite Index and China's CSI300 Index both saw small gains and losses in the morning session before finishing flat.

Kevin Liu is a CICC Research strategist who believes that the impact of any geopolitical conflicts will be fleeting.

Liu stated that "it does not change the original trend, which is determined by macro-fundamentals."

After oil prices surged, investors piled into Chinese energy firms, sending shares of CNOOC, PetroChina, and China Petroleum &?Corp sharply up.

Hong Kong's energy stocks also soared.

Jeff Mei said that a dramatic rise in oil prices could reduce overall risk appetite, as higher inflation would make it harder for the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) to lower rates.

He said, "In times of conflict, investors flock to safe-haven assets like gold."

The index that tracks Chinese gold stocks rose 2%. Defence stocks also increased.

Shipping stocks rose with shares of Nanjing Tanker, COSCO Shipping, and China Merchants Energy Shipping all rising.

The shares of Chinese airlines and tourism companies have'slumped' due to travel disruptions caused by conflict.

Air China shares fell by more than 3% both in Shanghai and Hong Kong.

China Southern Airlines shares and China Eastern Airlines shares, listed on the mainland, also fell.

Energy was the only major sector that showed positive growth in Hong Kong. The biggest losers were the tech, healthcare and tourism sectors.

Crypto ETFs listed on Hong Kong's stock exchange fell.

Jeff Ko, Chief Analyst at CoinEx, said that if the conflict intensifies, gold will remain strong, while bitcoin is expected to become?more vulnerable.

Hong Kong "often acts like a shock-absorbing device" in contrast to Beijing, he said. Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom, Editing by Kevin Buckland & Thomas Derpinghaus

(source: Reuters)