Australian shares traded flat on Friday, with gains in healthcare firms offset by losses in miners, including Rio Tinto, which tumbled on speculation around early-stage merger talks with London-listed smaller rival Glencore.
The S&P/ASX 200 index marginally fell 0.1% to 8,322.2 points by 2322 GMT.
The benchmark is on track to record a second consecutive weekly gain.
Rio Tinto’s shares fell 1.21% following reports of brief, unsuccessful merger talks with Glencore late last year, despite earlier speculation by Bloomberg News of ongoing early-stage discussions.
Meanwhile, local employment surprised markets as it sped past forecasts in December.
Traders now see a 69% probability of the Reserve Bank of Australia cutting rates during its first meeting on Feb. 18.
Upcoming fourth-quarter inflation data later this month will likely be crucial, with analysts expecting core inflation to rise 0.6% or less, potentially the smallest increase since mid-2021.
Banks, which have historically benefitted from higher-for-longer interest rates, slipped 0.2%, with the country’s top lender Commonwealth Bank of Australia falling 0.3%.
Miners declined 0.5%, with sector major BHP falling 0.3%.
The subindex is set to log its fourth straight week of gains. Healthcare stocks gained 0.6%, with biotech firm CSL rising 0.2%, as the Aussie dollar remains under pressure.
Australian shares hit 1-week closing high, banks and tech stocks lead gains
Energy stocks lost 0.2% on the back of declining oil prices, with subindex leaders Woodside Energy and Santos little changed.
Separately, Lynas Rare Earths fell 4.8% after the world’s largest producer of rare earths outside of China missed consensus estimates for its quarterly sales revenue.
Insignia Financial rose 5.2%, its highest level in over three years, as suitor CC Capital sweetened their bid for the firm, higher than Bain Capital’s offer.
New Zealand’s benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index was marginally up 0.2% at 13,020 points, set for their best week since Dec. 23. Local inflation data for the fourth quarter is due on Jan. 22.
Comments