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Australian shares fall as miners, energy stocks drag | Collector
Australian shares fall as miners, energy stocks drag
Business Recorder

Australian shares fall as miners, energy stocks drag

Australian shares fell on Friday and were set for their biggest weekly drop in more than a month, with miners and energy stocks leading the decline, while hopes faded for a US-Iran peace deal. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.4% to 8,645.20 by 0016 GMT. The benchmark has fallen more than 1% so far this week, on track for its worst week since end-April. Risk sentiment soured after the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia rejected a new ceasefire in Lebanon on Thursday, dampening US President Donald Trump’s efforts to halt the Lebanon conflict and forge a broader peace deal with Iran. In Sydney, commodity-linked stocks were the biggest drag, with miners falling 2.4%, dragged down by weaker iron prices. The sub-index was on course for its worst week in more than a month. Gold stocks tumbled 1.9% despite an overnight rise in bullion prices. Gold miner Evolution Mining lost 2%. In corporate news, Lynas Rare Earths late on Thursday named company veteran Pol Le Roux as its interim CEO from June 30. Shares of the firm fell nearly 1% on Friday. Financials slipped 0.5%, with the “Big Four” banks losing about 1% each. Energy stocks fell 1.1% after four consecutive sessions of gains, as oil prices settled around 3% lower overnight. On the other hand, tech stocks rose 1.6% and were on track for their best week in nearly two months. Shares in Megaport rose as much as 27.4% to hit their highest in more than four years, as trading resumed after a halt. On Wednesday, the company secured four new AI infrastructure contracts worth A$458.9 million ($326.87 million) and said it would raise A$827.3 million, to build an inference cloud to cash in on surging demand for AI-related facilities. New Zealand’s benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index rose 0.3% to 13,137.76.

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