DAX investors are using the recent price slide to re-enter the stock market.

The German benchmark index rose 0.6 percent to 15,222 points when it opened on Tuesday.

The imbalance of the Chinese real estate company Evergrande continues to weigh on the mood, said George Boubouras, chief analyst of the asset manager K2.

In the event of a collapse of the $ 305 billion indebted group, there would be no turmoil to fear like after the bankruptcy of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008.

"If it turns into a bigger problem, it will be addressed and the company either bailed out or rescheduled."

However, the difficulties faced by the Chinese real estate company made problems for the Asian stock exchanges. The Hong Kong benchmark index fell on Tuesday by up to 1.4 percent to a twelve-month low of 23,771.46 points. In Tokyo, the Nikkei slipped 1.8 percent to 29,948 points after the long weekend in Japan. The stock exchanges in Shanghai and Seoul remained closed again due to the holiday. For a recovery of the markets, concrete steps are required by the Chinese government in order to prevent contagion effects in the event of a collapse of the Evergrande group, which is indebted with US $ 305 billion, said portfolio manager Dave Wang of asset manager Nuvest. The real estate giant's shares fell another 3.1 percent in Hong Kong,although Chairman of the Board of Directors Hui Ka Yuan had promised that the current liquidity crisis would be overcome.

On Wall Street, prices fell significantly on Monday. The US leading index Dow Jones lost 1.8 percent to 33,970 points. The technology-heavy Nasdaq lost 2.2 percent to 14,713 jobs. The broad S&P 500 lost 1.7 percent to 4357 meters. In America, investors are eagerly awaiting the Fed meeting on Wednesday, which will send a signal that billions in bond purchases will be scaled back.