Asia-Pacific markets were mostly higher on Tuesday as investors digested key economic data across the region.
The Hang Seng index fell 0.69% as Hong Kong's Chief Executive John Lee announced to drop its mask mandate starting March 1. The Hang Seng Tech index meanwhile, fell 1.42%.
In mainland China, the Shenzhen Component climbed 0.7% to close at 11,783.8, leading gains among the benchmark indexes, while the Shanghai Composite was 0.66% higher to end the day at 3,279.6.
South Korea's Kospi gained 0.42% to close at 2,412.85, while the Kosdaq rose 1.45% to finish at 791.6 as battery material maker L&F stocks jumped after winning a contract with Tesla.
The Nikkei 225 rose fractionally to close at 27,445.56 and the Topix ended Tuesday marginally higher at 1,993.28 as Japan saw its worst decline in factory output in eight months, recording a 4.6% drop in January compared to December.
In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.47% to close at 7,258.4 as retail sales for January came in higher than expected at 1.9% compared to December, higher than expectations of a 1.5% rise.
India will release its gross domestic product for the fourth quarter of 2022 later today, forecasted to show a 4.6% rise.
Overnight in the US, stocks rose on Monday night as traders tried to recover some ground following the worst week of the year on Wall Street. All three major US indexes closed higher, with the Nasdaq Composite leading gains.
— CNBC's Tanaya Macheel contributed to this report