Discretionary stocks weigh on Australian shares, gold miners cushion fall

Reuters
10/31
Discretionary stocks weigh on Australian shares, gold miners cushion fall

Discretionary stocks fall, led by Wesfarmers

Financials, gold miners limit drag on Australian shares

Investors favour defensive assets amid interest rate uncertainty

ANZ slides after flagging A$1.11 bln profit hit

Updates to close

By Atharva Singh

Oct 31 (Reuters) - Australian shares erased early gains to finish slightly lower on Friday, led by losses in discretionary stocks as policy-easing bets eased, although advances in gold miners and some of the major banks limited the decline.

The S&P/ASX 200 index .AXJO slipped 3.6 points to finish at 8,881.90 points, after rising as much as 0.7% earlier. The benchmark, which hit a record high of 9,115.20 earlier in the month, logged a meagre 0.4% monthly gain.

Investors continued to shift into financials and gold stocks, favouring defensive assets amid lingering uncertainty over the Reserve Bank of Australia’s policy outlook. With a rate hold widely expected next week, risk appetite was muted. 0#AUDIRPR

"Given the hot CPI print and shallow RBA path, banks do appear to be a very lucrative place to be for the next cycle, especially as they are mostly insulated from trade-related volatility," said Justin Lin, investment analyst at GlobalXETFs.

The financials index .AXFJ finished a few points higher, buoyed by CBA CBA.AX and Westpac WBC.AX, which added 0.7% and 1%, respectively. ANZ Group ANZ.AX ended 0.6% lower after flagging an A$1.11 billion ($721 million) impact on its second-half cash and statutory profits.

Gold stocks .AXGD jumped 3.3%, extending their run on expectations of record bullion prices and helping limit losses on the benchmark. Evolution Mining EVN.AX and Northern Star Resources NST.AX climbed as much as 3.5% each.

The sub-index is still closing the month nearly flat, despite sharp swings driven by bullion price volatility.

Meanwhile, discretionary consumer stocks .AXDJ fell 1.7% to its lowest in three months, dragging on the benchmark.

Australia's top non-food retail conglomerate, Wesfarmers WES.AX, shed 2.5% on concerns over its valuation and the potential impact of interest rate expectations on demand, per Jefferies analysts. Jefferies slashed price target the stock by 5%.

Electronics retailer JB Hi-Fi JBH.AX fell 3.4%, losing a cumulative 9% over the past three sessions on tepid sales growth.

New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index .NZ50 rose 0.6% to end at 13,548.32 points.

(Reporting by Atharva Singh and Roshan Thomas in Bengaluru; Editing by Eileen Soreng)

((Atharva.Singh@thomsonreuters.com;))

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