SYDNEY/WELLINGTON: Australian shares ended firmer on Monday as a surge in commodity prices lifted mining and energy stocks, while strong corporate earnings and hopes of a global economic rebound in the wake of coronavirus vaccine rollouts also boosted sentiment.
The S&P/ASX 200 index rose 0.91% to 6868.9 at the close of trade.
Miners closed 1.91% higher, with copper prices at their peak in more than eight years. Global miner Rio Tinto Ltd gained 1.8% while rival BHP Ltd advanced 2.3%.
Energy stocks also gained as oil prices hit their highest in more than a year amid fears of heightened tensions in the Middle East.
Nearmap saw its best session since July 10, 2018, after the aerial mapping firm rejected a short-seller report claiming it had misled markets about its growth in the United States, and reported narrower half-year losses from a year ago.
Electronics retailer JB Hi-Fi jumped to see its best day in a month after posting an 86% surge in first-half profit, driven by online sales, while Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Ltd gained 11.3% on logging a 67% climb in half-year profit. New Zealand’s benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index slipped 0.63% to finish the session down at 12,510.56 points, its lowest in nearly three months.
The country’s travel and leisure stocks posted losses after the country’s largest city Auckland announced a three-day lockdown on Sunday, following the emergence of three COVID-19 cases.