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Australian shares finish higher as gold miners and banks fall, but banks do well

Australian shares finish higher as gold miners and banks fall, but banks do well

Australian shares ended modestly higher Monday as financials were lifted by investors seeking refuge in bank stocks. Profit-taking among miners and gold producers also capped gains.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index, which had been trading flat throughout the session, finished 0.4% higher, at 9,031.90. The benchmark index closed Friday 0.8% lower.

Financials grew 1.5% as investors sought temporary refuge in heavyweight subindex.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst for KCM Trade Global. He said: "Financial shares have shown a strong track record of generating bumper profit this year, so it's not surprising to see this industry experiencing strong buying flow today."

Gold stocks, on the other hand fell as much as 5% intraday, their biggest percentage drop since July 9

Hayden Bairstow is the managing director and head of research for Argonaut. He said that some profit-taking likely contributed to the decline in gold stocks.

Hayden added, "We remain positive on gold but see upward movement from the current levels."

Sector has increased by over 11% compared to its previous session in October.

Evolution Mining, a gold miner, fell by 4.9% while Northern Star Resources finished 3.6% lower.

The mining stocks dropped by as much as 2,4% due to lower copper and gold price, while the weak economic data coming from Australia's main trading partner, China further soured sentiment.

BHP Group, the mining giant, lost 1.1% while South32 dropped 3.1%.

Energy stocks finished 0.4% higher, and technology stocks gained 0.9% in line with their U.S. counterparts.

Real estate and industrials both added almost 1%.

The benchmark S&P/NZX 50 Index in New Zealand gained 0.4% and ended at 13,344.96. Reporting by Rajasik Mukherjee and Atharva Singh from Bengaluru, editing by Nivedita Battacharjee

(source: Reuters)