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Australian shares are up on the back of mining gains, but market is looking forward to a rate cut in May

Australian shares are up on the back of mining gains, but market is looking forward to a rate cut in May

Australian shares closed higher on Thursday, as miners benefited from higher commodity prices. Domestic rate-cut bets were not deterred by the rebound in jobs.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index rose by 0.7%, closing at 7,813. The benchmark index recovered from a two week losing streak caused by U.S. president Donald Trump's sweeping Tariffs. It closed the holiday-shortened weekend 1.4% higher.

As iron ore prices rose on strong near-term demand, miners gained 1.5% and lifted the benchmark.

BHP was the only major miner to rise 1.2%, despite a decline in third-quarter production of iron ore from Western Australia operations, which fell from 68.1 million tonnes a year ago to 67.8 millions tons.

Rivals Rio Tinto and Fortescue rose by 2.5% and 0.5% respectively.

The markets have already priced in the 25 basis-point rate cut that Reserve Bank of Australia will make in May, even though Australian employment rose in March.

Citi analysts believe that a positive first-quarter Consumer Price Index (CPI), at the end April, will imply a reduction when the RBA meet on May 19-20.

Tony Sycamore is a market analyst with IG. He said: "Given downside risks to the global economy and softer inflation profile near-term, we expect RBA to ignore today's strong jobs data and reduce rates."

The energy sector's stocks increased 3.6% on the back of higher oil prices and concerns about tighter supplies.

Santos grew by 3.1% after it announced that the Pikka phase one operations in Alaska could be brought forward.

The benchmark S&P/NZX50 index for New Zealand ended the session with a 0.4% gain, closing at 12,118.99.

Investors still expect rate cuts, as the worsening outlook for the global economy remains an overhang. (Reporting by Shivangi Lahiri in Bengaluru; Editing by Sumana Nandy)

(source: Reuters)