China stocks flat as investors gauge global trade tensions
Chinese stocks were flat on Wednesday as investors weighed persistent global trade tensions and refrained from placing massive bets, while Hong Kong shares closed higher after a local holiday. ** At close, the Shanghai Composite index held its ground at 3,454.79, hovering near a three-month high.

Chinese stocks were flat on Wednesday as investors weighed persistent global trade tensions and refrained from placing massive bets, while Hong Kong shares closed higher after a local holiday.
** At close, the Shanghai Composite index held its ground at 3,454.79, hovering near a three-month high. China's blue-chip CSI300 index climbed less than 0.1%. ** Defensive sectors helped lift the markets onshore, with the banking sector sub-index up 0.8% while liquor distiller sector advanced 0.6%.
** Tech shares weighted on the markets, with the semiconductor sector and AI-related shares losing around 2% each. ** Hong Kong shares edged higher as traders returned from a local holiday. The benchmark Hang Seng Index added 0.6% at 24,221.41, while the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index , which tracks Chinese H-shares listed in the city, gained 0.5%.
** The local property sub-index added 2%, helping boosting the markets. Cash-strapped property giant New World Development surged nearly 10% after closing $11.2 billion refinancing deal. ** Caution prevailed across the region as investors await developments in trade talks, after U.S. President Donald Trump said he was not considering extending the July 9 deadline for countries to negotiate trade deals with the United States.
** The U.S. and India are nearing a deal that would lower tariffs on American imports to the South Asian country, while doubt has been cast on a deal with Japan. ** Around the region, MSCI's Asia ex-Japan stock index edged up 0.1%, while Japan's Nikkei index was down 0.6%.
** BlackRock Investment Institute said they are neutral on Chinese equities in the second half due to trade policy and stimulus uncertainties, but see selective opportunities in priority sectors that could receive targeted support. ** "We see slower growth after a relatively strong first half driven by front-loaded exports and stimulus," they said.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
ALSO READ
Women's Asian Cup Qualifiers Postponed Amidst Iran-Israel Air War
Rising Hate: Recent Surge in Anti-Muslim and Anti-Semitic Incidents Across the U.S.
Asian Markets Torn Between Geopolitical Tensions and Economic Uncertainty
Charlie Woods Tees Off for U.S. Junior Amateur Return
Kremlin Warns on U.S. Nuclear Speculation