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Australia shares fall amid global selloff as trade war escalates

Australian shares fell nearly 2% Wednesday, losing market value of $34.5 billion as a result of the escalating trade tensions, particularly between China and the United States.

After a 2.3% increase on Tuesday, the S&P/ASX 200 ended 1.8% lower. The index is down by nearly 15% since its all-time peak in mid-February.

After President Donald Trump's tariffs kicked in, other top Asian stock indices fell as well. Fears of foreign funds fleeing U.S. investments were sparked by a savage sale in Treasuries.

George Kurian is a portfolio manager with Oracle Investment Management. He said that investors' primary concern is the escalation of the trade war. This will result in no absolute winners, but only relative losers.

Investors bailed out of miners who are heavily exposed China, Australia's biggest trading partner.

The mining index fell 3.7%. BHP Group dropped 3.7%, and Mineral Resources fell 12.8%.

Kurian stated that "large tariffs on China have a negative impact for iron ore miner and this is now reflected by the sharp drop in iron ore stock prices."

Oil prices fell 4% and this was reflected in the decline of energy stocks. Sector major Woodside lost 3.9%.

Financials fell 0.8% but the rise of 0.7% in Australia's top lender Commonwealth Bank of Australia helped to cushion the fall.

Biotech giant CSL fell 5.1%, while health stocks dropped 3.6%.

The S&P/NZX 50 index, New Zealand's benchmark, fell 0.7% and ended at 11,806.55 despite the expected rate cut by the central banks. (Reporting by Rajasik Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Sumana Nandy)

(source: Reuters)