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Australia shares increase; criteria on course for weekly gain

Australian shares increased on Friday, set to log weekly gains with sentiments improving after minutes from the central bank December meeting showed that it is well on its way to cut interest rates.

The S&P/ ASX 200 index increased 0.6% to 8,271.1 points by 2345 GMT. The benchmark is on track to log a gain of 2.6% for the week, its very first in 4.

The outlook for rate cuts in 2025 was lifted by the reaffirmation of a dovish tone from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA). The minutes from the RBA's meeting showed that board members viewed inflationary dangers to have actually lessened, while downside threats to the economy had strenghtened.

The minutes have adopted an explicit reducing bias for the very first time this cycle, Goldman Sachs analysts composed, adding that it continues to expect the RBA to commence a gradual easing cycle in February, conditional on a soft outcome in the trimmed-mean customer price index in the fourth quarter.

Miners, heavily depending on trade with China, increased 1.1% after a Chinese news agency reported that efforts to restore the country's incredible property market will continue in 2025.

Iron ore costs, however, ended the day lower with headwinds from damaging steel consumption in the world's second-largest economy.

Mining giants BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue increased between 0.7% and 0.9% owing to the favorable outlook.

Monetary stocks climbed up 0.5% to a one-week high, with two of the Big 4 banks trading in the green.

Gold stocks advanced 1.6% on higher demand for the safe haven possession in light trading as markets waited for the incoming Trump administration and the Federal Reserve's rate cut cycle next year to gauge the U.S. economy's health.

New Zealand's benchmark S&P/ NZX 50 index reversed early losses to rise 0.4%,. touching a one-month high level.

(source: Reuters)