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Australia shares are up as healthcare and banking gains outweigh mining losses

Australian shares were up slightly on Thursday as gains in healthcare and banking stocks offset a fall in mining stocks. This comes a day after mixed data about inflation left the central banks' monetary policy uncertain.

S&P/ASX 200 Index?edged?up?0.1% to 8,707.50 at 0012 GMT. The benchmark index rose by 0.2% on Tuesday.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has set a target range of 2%-3% for core inflation. However, the data released on Wednesday shows that consumer prices increased 3.4% from a month earlier in November. This is slower than the alarmingly high rate of 3.8% seen in October.

RBA already warned it would raise its cash rate in the event of inflation not cooling down sufficiently. Markets imply that there is a 31% chance for the RBA to increase its rate by a quarter-point at its February '3 meeting.

The RBA will make its next policy decision based on the quarterly inflation figures, which are due in a few weeks.

After three sessions of losses, the financial stocks on the bourse rose by 0.3%. The "Big Four' banks gained between 0.2% and 1.1 percent.

The Nasdaq tech index rose 1.6% while the healthcare stocks rose 1.5%. Investors returned to artificial intelligence stocks as they re-invested in Nasdaq-heavy stocks.

Consumer discretionary stocks gained 0.3%, despite a drop in oil prices overnight.

While copper prices plunged sharply from their 'all-time peak, and nickel fell from its 19-month high, the miners dropped 0.3% despite having recorded record closing highs in three consecutive sessions.

Rio Tinto Group and BHP Group both fell by 0.4%.

Gold stocks fell by 0.8% after the bullion price dropped due to profit-taking, and a stronger US dollar.

The benchmark S&P/NZX50 index in New Zealand fell by 0.2%, to 13,690.85 point. (Reporting by Shruti Agarwal in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

(source: Reuters)