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Australian shares fall as mining and gold stocks lose their shine

Australian shares fell on Monday. Miners and gold stocks were the worst hit, but investors are bracing themselves for tighter monetary policies from the central banks this week.

As of 2311 GMT the S&P/ASX 200 was down by 0.2%, at 8,620.4, after a winning streak of four sessions. The benchmark index closed Friday 0.2% higher.

A poll conducted last week indicated that the Reserve Bank of Australia will likely leave its cash rate unchanged on December 9 at its final meeting in 2025.

Recent data showed a resurgence of inflationary pressures, and the economy had grown at its fastest pace in the past two years. Swaps now indicate that the central banks will keep rates unchanged until the early 2026 period, with an increasing probability that they may increase them thereafter.

Investors will also be waiting for local employment data due Thursday.

Market watchers around the world expect the U.S. Federal Reserve will reduce its cash rates this week by 0.25%.

After six sessions of gains, the iron ore price slump in Sydney caused miners to retreat as much as 0.5%.

BHP Group Rio Tinto and Fortescue, mining giants, shed between 0.2% and 1,4%.

Australian gold miners dropped as much as 1,4%, hovering at a near two-week low. This was despite the bullion rising on expectations of an upcoming U.S. interest rate cut, which boosted sentiment.

Northern Star Resources, a gold miner, has shed up to 1.1% of its value.

Both energy stocks and healthcare stocks fell by 0.3%.

Rate-sensitive financials, including real estate, were mostly unchanged.

National Storage REIT, a stock in the benchmark index, rose nearly 3% and reached a new record high after the company announced that it would proceed with the Brookfield-GIC consortium's buyout of A$4 billion (2.65 billion).

Over the Tasman sea, New Zealand’s benchmark S&P/NZX50 index slipped 0.2% to 13,509.39.

(source: Reuters)