A-shares closing review: Shanghai Composite Index opened lower and recovered to rise 0.38%, with over 4,200 stocks in the entire market increasing.

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The three major indices of the A-shares market all rose collectively today.
By the close, the Shanghai Composite Index increased by 0.38%, the Shenzhen Component Index rose by 0.59%, the ChiNext Index gained 0.38%, and the Beijing 50 Index edged up by 0.01%.
The combined trading volume of the Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Beijing markets was 193.3B yuan, a decrease of 1,933 billion yuan compared to the previous day, with over 4,200 stocks rising across the three markets.
In terms of sectors and themes, the top gainers included the glyphosate, epoxypropane, fertilizer, pork, innovative drugs, power grid equipment, tourism and hotels, beverage manufacturing, and vitamin sectors; while the oil and gas exploration and services, MicroLED concept, cultivated diamonds, coal mining and processing, and precious metals sectors saw the largest declines.
In the market, there was renewed speculation on rising-price theme stocks, with chemical stocks such as glyphosate and epoxypropane collectively strengthening in the afternoon, with Satellite Chemical, Hongbaoli, and Hongqiang shares hitting the daily limit.
Pork stocks rose during the session, with Muyuan Foods and Wens Foodstuffs leading the gains, following reports that relevant departments held meetings to strengthen comprehensive regulation of hog production capacity.
Market liquidity improved, funds returned to growth sectors like innovative drugs, with Rongchang Biological surging over 10%, and stocks like Zhongyuan Xiehe hitting the daily limit.
Additionally, sectors such as power grid equipment, brain-computer interfaces, and vitamins also saw gains.
On the other hand, news about the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz fluctuated repeatedly, leading to a pullback in most stocks of bulk commodities such as oil and gas, precious metals, and coal, with stocks like Tongyuan Petroleum, Shaanxi Black Cat, and SINOPEC Oilfield declining.

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