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Australian stocks rise on concerns about iron ore supplies

Australian shares closed higher on Wednesday, as gains in heavyweight miners tracked higher iron?ore prices amid concerns that planned strike action by BHP Group employees at Port Hedland may disrupt supply.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index rose by 0.4%, to 8,841.1. The benchmark closed Tuesday flat.

The mining subindex gained 1.7%, marking a second session of gains. This was due to higher iron ore prices and concerns that planned strikes at BHP Group’s Port Hedland operations could disrupt the supply. Anglo-Australian mining company rose as high as 4.4%. This was its highest level in more than four weeks. Additional support came from concerns about potential disruptions to copper supply in Chile, ahead of an upcoming winter storm that is expected to bring heavy rainfall to key copper producing regions.

According to Philip Pepe of Shaw and Partners, senior equity analyst, the'move seemed to be driven primarily by weather risks in Chile as copper represents roughly half of BHP earnings. Peer Rio Tinto gained 1.1%, lending support to the mining sub-index after reporting stronger-than-expected second-quarter iron ore sales.

The company also stated that the operational impact of Middle East conflict was limited and did not cause any material disruptions to its core commodities or production. Fortescue gained 0.3%.

The technology stocks rose 0.1% overnight, following the gains of its Wall Street peers.

Block's Australian listed shares rose by 5.2% while NEXTDC gained 5.7%.

Shares of Macquarie Group rose 2%.

Gold stocks lost 1% of their value as bullion prices fell. After reporting a decline in annual production, shares of gold mining company Evolution Mining fell 3.7%. Energy stocks then lost?0.6% to end two consecutive sessions of gains. Woodside Energy shares and Santos's each rose 0.9% and 0.3%.

The benchmark S&P/NZX50 index for New Zealand fell 0.1% to 13,635.07. (Reporting by Anjali Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

(source: Reuters)