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Australia shares rebound as cooling inflation improves hope of February rate cut

Australian shares reversed course to trade sharply higher on Wednesday, as a key inflation print for November enhanced wish for a rate cut in February.

The S&P/ ASX 200 index rose as much as 0.9% to 8,356.1 points since 0315 GMT, after having actually dropped 0.3% earlier in the day.

Australia's carefully seen underlying inflation procedure slowed to 3.2% in November from 3.5% in the previous month, information from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed.

Today's inflation information has actually seen money market values in the probability of a rate cut in February to 76% chance, with a now expected 3 cuts for fiscal year 2025 or 75 basis points overall, said Jesse Moors, portfolio supervisor at Spatium Capital.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has held the cash rate at 4.35% for the previous 14 months as it tries to find proof that inflation is heading back to its target band.

Financiers are waiting for the Feb. 17-18 board conference of the regional central bank.

Cooling inflation and expectations of an impending interest rate cut moved banks by 1.3% with all the Big 4 lenders trading in the green. Commonwealth Bank of Australia, the nation's largest, included 1.7%.

While a lower rates of interest environment pressures the banks' margins, the outlook for increased financing supplies tailwinds for the banks in the next phase of the financial cycle, said Grady Wulff, market analyst at Bell Direct.

Mining stocks got 1.4%, snapping a three-session losing streak, with sector majors BHP Group and Rio Tinto rising 1.7% and 1.4%, respectively.

U.S. stocks toppled on Tuesday after a batch of upbeat economic information raised concerns that an inflation rebound could decrease the Federal Reserve's rate of financial policy easing.

Technology stocks in Sydney tracked their U.S. peers to trade 0.9% lower, with ASX-shares of Block falling 3.6%.

New Zealand's benchmark S&P/ NZX 50 index was trading more or less the same.

(source: Reuters)