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Shanghai stocks reach a 10-year high due to Iran conflict boosting energy and gold shares. HK falls

Shanghai stocks closed Monday at a record high, defying regional weakness in the aftermath of the Iran conflict, as investors snapped up shares in energy, gold, and defence.

The expectation that Beijing would intervene to calm the markets in advance of a parliamentary meeting later this week boosted sentiment on the mainland. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell more than 2 percent to a 2-month low. U.S.-Israeli strikes against Iran killed the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and escalated geopolitical tensions. Global economic uncertainty was also heightened. The Shanghai Composite Index closed the session at 4,182.6, up 0.5%, its highest level since June 2015. China's blue chip CSI300 Index gained 0.4%.

Kevin Liu is a CICC Research strategist who believes that the impact of a geopolitical war will be?fleeting'.

Liu stated that the trend is not altered by this. After oil prices?soared, investors piled into Chinese energy firms, sending shares of oil giants CNOOC, PetroChina, and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp'sharply higher.

The price of energy in Hong Kong has 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, "Investors seek out safe assets like gold during times of war."

A Chinese gold index rose 7%. Defence stocks also rose. Shipping stocks grew, with shares of Nanjing Tanker and COSCO Shipping, as well as China Merchants Energy Shipping, all rising by the daily limit.

Shares of Chinese airlines and?tourism companies have fallen due to?travel disruptions caused by conflict.

Air China shares fell by more than 3% both in Shanghai and Hong Kong. China Southern Airlines?and China Eastern Airlines, both listed on the mainland, also saw their shares plummet.

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 more vulnerable.

Hong Kong is often a shock-absorbing factor, he said. While Beijing has stepped in frequently to support the onshore market, Hong Kong "often acts" as a shock-absorbing factor. Shanghai Newsroom, Kevin Buckland and Thomas Derpinghaus edited the article.

(source: Reuters)