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Australia shares sink in a sea of red, as banks and miners lead the broad sell-off

Australian shares dropped nearly 1.5% Friday, sinking in a sea red and reaching their lowest level since July, as miners, financials, and fading expectations for a domestic interest rate cut this summer weighed on benchmark.

S&P/ASX 200 Index fell 1.5% at 2348 GMT to 8,623.30. The benchmark index fell 0.5% Thursday.

The index fell by 1.7% this week, on course for a third consecutive weekly decline. This was due to the weakness of major banks after the earnings announcements from Commonwealth Bank and the Thursday jobs data.

The Labor Report reinforced expectations that Reserve Bank of Australia would hold rates for longer and dampened hopes of a rate cut this year.

The higher-than-expected readings of inflation earlier this month cast doubt on any near-term policy easing. This prompted economists to delay their forecasts.

Miners on the stock exchange lost 2.7% due to the lower copper price.

BHP Group, Rio Tinto and other mining giants fell by 2% each.

The sub-index gained 5.5% for the week as the copper price rose throughout the majority of the period. Mineral Resources, a major player in the lithium sector, also saw a rise.

The "Big Four" banks led the losses, with financials falling as much as 1,9%.

This sector is on track to have its worst week ever.

Gold stocks dropped 4% due to lower bullion price.

The sector is on track to have its best week ever since August.

Technology stocks continued to decline and fell 4%. They reached their lowest level since the 29th of April.

This sector has also lost 5% in the last week, marking its fourth consecutive session.

The sub-index of energy stocks fell 1% due to lower global oil prices.

Woodside Energy, a smaller competitor of Santos, traded mostly flat.

As of 2348 GMT, the benchmark S&P/NZX 50 Index for New Zealand fell 0.5% to 13,540.70.

(source: Reuters)