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Australia shares are heading for correction as US tariff tensions rise

Australia shares are heading for correction as US tariff tensions rise

Australian shares continued to fall on Wednesday, briefly entering correction territory. Investor appetite was dampened by local media reports that the White House confirmed Australia would not be exempted from U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum.

S&P/ASX 200 Index fell by 1.2% at 0001 GMT to 7,793.6. The benchmark index fell up to 1.6% in the morning session. It is now down around 10% from its February 14 high. This is known as a "market correction".

Local media reported on the fact that Australia would not be exempted from U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum that President Donald Trump will impose against other countries. They cited White House spokesperson KarolineLeavitt.

The reports stated that Trump had agreed to exempt Australia from tariffs in February, but decided not to do so. This was due in part because of the U.S. surplus trade with Australia.

The U.S. stock market continued its biggest overnight sell-off in many months after Trump announced he would increase tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum products by 50%. These tariffs will take effect in a few hours.

Real estate stocks in Sydney fell by as much as 1.5 percent to their lowest level since the second of July 2024.

The heavyweight financials fell for the seventh consecutive session, dropping as much as 1,7% and reaching their lowest level since Oct 7, 2024. The 'Big Four" lenders fell between 1.1% to 1.9%.

The index fell 0.7%, while the miners' price dropped by 0.7%.

BHP Group, the world's largest listed mining company, fell 1.1%. Rio Tinto, Fortescue and Fortescue, on the other hand, both fell by 2.2% and 1.6%.

Gold stocks rose 0.8%, bucking the trend. The gold price increased on demand for safe havens amid concerns about an economic slowdown due to tariff wars and a weaker US dollar.

The benchmark S&P/NZX50 index for New Zealand fell by 0.9%, to 12,305.19.

(source: Reuters)