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Australian shares end lower as CBA's rout offsets gains in resource stock

The Australian share market ended Tuesday slightly lower as the slump in Commonwealth Bank outweighed gains in commodity stocks. This was after the lender warned about margin pressure due to rising competition and eased rates.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index ended the day 0.2% lower, at 8,818.80. The benchmark index rose 0.8% on Sunday.

Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), the largest bank in Australia by market capitalisation fell more than 6% and lost over A$19 Billion ($12.35 Billion) of market value. The lender was the biggest laggard in the benchmark.

CBA, who holds almost one-third the sub-index for financials, has pulled the sub-index down by nearly 2%. National Australia Bank, on the other hand, has eased its position by 1.3%. Peers Westpac & ANZ bucked this trend by rising 1,3% & 0.5% respectively.

Marc Jocum is a senior product and investment analyst at Global X.

Gold stocks rose 2.4%, reaching a new three-week high. The precious metal continued to gain on the expectation of a U.S. rate cut in March.

The lithium mining companies Pilbara Minerals (up 7.5%) and Liontown Resources (up 7.83%), respectively, have seen their prices rise on the back of higher battery metal prices.

After a survey, consumer discretionary stocks rose 0.8%

consumer sentiment

In November, for the first time since nearly four years, we were optimistic about our family finances and prospects.

The benchmark S&P/NZX50 index in New Zealand ended the day 12.93 points down at 13,604.55. Data earlier in the morning showed that inflation expectations were muted for the fourth quarter. This paved the way for an interest rate cut of a quarter point to 2.25%.

Swaps indicate a 10% chance that the central bank of this Pacific island nation could make a surprise half-point reduction, just like it did last October. ($1 = 1.5389 Australian dollars)

(source: Reuters)