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BHP and BHP miners gain as Australian shares soar; BHP surges after abandoning Anglo talks

BHP and BHP miners gain as Australian shares soar; BHP surges after abandoning Anglo talks
BHP and BHP miners gain as Australian shares soar; BHP surges after abandoning Anglo talks

Australian shares started the week with a positive note, as banks and miners led gains. Global miner BHP rose after shelving preliminary tie up talks with Anglo American. Tech and gold stocks also provided additional support.

S&P/ASX 200 rose by 1.1% at 2320 GMT to 8,506.4. The benchmark index fell 1.6% Friday.

BHP rose 1.1% following the announcement that the world's largest listed miner had dropped its plans to tie up with Anglo American after initial discussions with the London-listed competitor's board.

The mining sub-index rose 1% as Rio Tinto, Fortescue and other peers advanced by 1.8%, 1.4% and respectively.

Financials gained 0.9%, reaching a new one-week high. The "big four banks" recovered from a selloff that occurred last week due to valuation and earnings worries.

Macquarie's stock rose 0.6% following the investment bank's bid to purchase all shares of Qube. The logistics company was valued at A$11.6 billion ($7.49billion) including debt. This is a new record for the stock.

On Friday, tech stocks gained 2.1% on the back of Wall Street gains on increased Federal Reserve rate-cut betting.

WiseTech Global, Siteminder and others led the gains in this subindex with each gaining nearly 3%.

The gold miners rose by 1.6% as a result of the rise in gold prices. Northern Star Resources rose 2.1%.

Healthcare and real estate subindices also gained 1,6% and 1,3% respectively.

Investors will be watching the inflation data on Wednesday to get a better idea of the central bank’s cash rate path.

Further south in New Zealand, the benchmark S&P/NZX50 index was mostly flat at 13,404.35.

The Pacific nation is facing a busy week as the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, which meets on Wednesday, is widely expected to cut rates another quarter-point to 2.25%. ($1 = 1.5480 Australian dollars) (Reporting by Kumar Tanishk in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi Aich)

(source: Reuters)