Updates to market close
SHANGHAI, Feb 25 (Reuters) - China and Hong Kong stocks closed higher on Wednesday, as investors snapped up rare earth and metal shares amid simmering geopolitical tensions.
** China's blue-chip CSI300 Index .CSI300 ended 0.6% higher while the Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC gained 0.7%. Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index .HSI was up 0.7%.
** The CSI Rare Earth Index .CSI930598 jumped 6.1%, leading gains onshore.
** The rally came after China prohibited the export of dual-use items to 20 Japanese entities that it says supply Japan's military. The rules effectively cut companies off from the seven rare earths and associated materials currently on China's dual-use control list.
** Meanwhile, Reuters reported that the Trump administration plans to use a Pentagon-created artificial intelligence programme to help set reference prices for critical minerals.
** Non-ferrous metal shares .CSISNMIM climbed 3.8%, while materials shares .HSCIM outperformed offshore, up 2.7%.
** Tech majors fell in Hong Kong .HSTECH, down 0.2%.
** "Despite the year-to-date weakness in internet stocks causing significant losses, investors believe concerns over the AI-fear trade are exaggerated for the China market," UBS analysts said in a note to clients.
** "Consequently, investors are reallocating funds to less crowded sectors like oil services, coal, lithium, and insurance names."
** Hong Kong-listed Alibaba 9988.HK and Tencent 0700.HK fell 10% and 12%, respectively, over the past month, while onshore artificial intelligence shares lost nearly 4%.
** Onshore consumer staple .CSICS and real estate .CSI000952 shares rose 0.6% and 2.2%, respectively.
** Goldman Sachs analysts said data from the Lunar New Year period pointed to a solid demand backdrop, with consumers still willing to spend during the festival, broadly matching slightly higher market expectations.
** They, however, cautioned that a typical post-holiday slowdown and a longer break that might have flattered the figures made the subsequent trend crucial to monitor.
(Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)
((li.gu@tr.com))