Latest News

Australian shares end lower, dragged down by financials, weak quarterly GDP information

Australian shares ended lower on Wednesday, dragged down by financials as information revealed the economy grew less than anticipated in the third quarter and as financiers priced in rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) from April.

The S&P/ ASX 200 index alleviated 0.4% to 8,462.6 points. The sub-index scaled a lifetime high of 8,514.50 points on Tuesday.

Australia's economy grew by less than anticipated in the third quarter as data from the Australian Bureau of Stats revealed real gdp (GDP) grew 0.3% in the September quarter, missing market forecasts of 0.4%.

The weaker-than-expected quarterly GDP figures not only cooled recent stock market optimism, however also advanced expectations for the RBA's first rate cut from May 2025 to April 2025, said Hebe Chen, a market expert at IG.

Rate-sensitive banking stocks led losses, closing 0.8% lower. The Big Four banks shed between 0.5% and 1.6%.

Bucking the trend, miners finished 0.7% greater to its highest closing in over 3 weeks on remaining optimism surrounding China stimulus.

Heavily-weighted BHP Group, Fortescue and Rio Tinto advanced in between 0.7% and 1.4%.

Shares of Lynas Rare Earths ended 5% greater after China banned exports of some critical mineral to the U.S.

Gold miners closed 0.9% higher, putting Advancement Mining and ASX-listed shares of Newmont Corporation among leading gainers on the benchmark.

New Zealand's benchmark S&P/ NZX 50 index closed 1.5%. lower at 12,896.67 points, logging losses for a 2nd. consecutive session.

(source: Reuters)