Australian stocks declined on Friday as sliding commodity prices weighed on resource-heavy sectors, with a weaker finish on Wall Street overnight denting sentiment.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.2% to 7,248.80 by 0026 GMT. For the week, however, it is up almost 1% and is set for its third straight weekly gain.
Mining stocks, the biggest constituent of the benchmark, fell 2.2% as copper plunged to five-week lows. However, the subindex was headed for weekly gains of 0.6%.
Mining majors Rio Tinto and BHP shed 2.8% and 2%, respectively.
The gold index led losses on the benchmark by declining 3.7% after spot prices slumped 2%. The sub-index has lost 3.8% so far this week.
Gold miner Northern Star shed nearly 5%, while Newscrest Mining declined 3.1%.
Tech stocks eased 1.2%, tracking their peers on Wall Street, with index giant Afterpay Ltd falling 2.5%.
However, the energy index was up 0.3% as oil prices steadied after weekly US crude stocks took a sharp fall.
The sub-index is set to gain 7.6% this week in its biggest weekly gain since Jan. 8.
Natural gas major Woodside Petroleum added 0.4% on Friday, while Oil Search gained 0.7%.
Banking stocks also rose 0.6% with the "big four" lenders trading higher.
Across the Tasman sea, New Zealand's benchmark NZX 50 index was up 0.1% to 12,430, with Synlait Milk being the top gainer.
In other markets, Japan's Nikkei was down 0.9% at 28,798.07, while S&P 500 E-minis futures were down 11.75, or 0.3%.