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Australian shares drop on the back of losses in gold, banking stocks

Australian shares drop on the back of losses in gold, banking stocks

Gold prices down after two consecutive sessions of gains

Evolution Mining's share price drops by over 5%

Investors focus on upcoming unemployment data

Roshan Thomas

Sept. 15 - Australian stocks dipped on Monday due to a decline in gold and banking stocks. Miners also fell on the back of weak iron ore and concerns about China's real estate sector.

The S&P/ASX 200 closed 0.1% higher at 8,853 point. The benchmark closed Friday 0.7% higher.

Profit-taking pressured the Financials sector to drop by 0.2%. This sub-index has now dropped 0.8% in the last month, reducing gains made year-to date of almost 12.2%.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia (the country's largest lender) dropped by 0.6%, which weighed on the subindex.

CBA, despite the decline, has been on a good run this year. Its stock price is up over 10% by 2025. This includes a 5% increase in just June.

Greg Smith, an investment specialist with the New Zealand-based Generate KiwiSaver scheme, says falling interest rates will likely sustain competition between Australian banks for home loans, which may put pressure on margins.

After two sessions of gains, the gold subindex fell 2.7%. The shares of gold mining company Evolution Mining fell 5.3%.

Iron ore prices also fell, as new data showed persistent weakness in China’s property sector.

ANZ Group shares dropped 0.6% among individual stocks. The lender agreed on Monday to pay A$240m ($159.8m) for systemic failures. This included acting "unconscionably", in a deal to buy government bonds, and charging fees to dead customers.

Investors are now awaiting Australia's employment data, due on Thursday. This will be crucial in assessing if the domestic labor market has weakened.

Justin Lin, GlobalXETFs investment analyst, believes that equities will remain rangebound in this week. Trading cues are likely to be affected by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s rate-cut decision on Wednesday.

The benchmark S&P/NZX 50 Index in New Zealand fell 0.1% to 13,208.31.

(source: Reuters)