4:57pm: That’s it for Markets Live today.
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You can read a wrap-up of the action on the markets here.
Have a great weekend and see you all again Monday morning from 9.
4:56pm: Shares posted their biggest weekly drop since the start of February after insurgent attacks on oil fields in northern Iraq led to talk of war from the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Australia. The escalation in geopolitical risk added to the pressure on the local equity market following a slump in the spot price of Australia’s biggest export, iron ore.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index and the All Ordinaries Index both lost 1.1 per cent over the past week to two-month lows of 5405.1 points and 5383.7 points, respectively. Losses were broad-based with the exception of energy and gold stocks, which benefited from investor risk aversion and higher oil prices.
Despite fears of another gulf war brewing, Wilson Asset Management chief investment officer Chris Stottsaid it would not alter his strategy. “Indeed, as investors ditch assets traditionally considered risky, such as mining stocks, it could present a buying opportunity,” he said.
Mining was the worst-performing sector for the week, down 2.6 per cent, as the spot price for iron ore, landed in China, lost another 2.8 per cent to its lowest value since September 2012 at $US91.50 a tonne.
Resources giant BHP Billiton lost 2.6 per cent over the five trading sesssions to $35.29 despite analysts roundly endorsing management for showing discipline in announcing more cuts to struggling projects.
Main rival Rio Tinto fell 3 per cent to $57.60, while iron ore miner Fortescue Metals Group crashed 10.2 per cent to $4.06.
Smaller iron ore miners with higher production costs were hit much harder. BC Iron was the worst-performing stock in the ASX 200, down 15.7 per cent at $3.06.
Engineering services contractor Downer EDI dropped 13.3 per cent to $4.55 after BHP Billiton cancelled a $360 million coalmine contract.
Gold miners got a boost with equity strategists expecting the precious metal to surge in value if the political conflict in Iraq escalates. The spot price for gold strengthened 1.5 per cent over the week to $US1272.15 per ounce.
4:45pm: And here are the best and worst performing stocks in the top 200 today.
Energy names feature heavily in the best performers after the oil price spiked overnight, while iron ore miners went the other way.
Aquila Resources was the worst performer, down 12.4 per cent after China Baosteel Group said it wouldn't increase its $3.40 takeover offer. Aquila shares closed at $3.10.
Best and worst performing stocks in the ASX 200 today.
4:30pm: Shares staged a rally from their late morning lows, climbing steadily higher into the afternoon as bank shares pared their losses and regional markets enjoyed a strong bounce.
It wasn't enough to negate the steep early fall, with the ASX 200 and All Ords closing 0.4 per cent, or 24 points, lower to 5405.1 and 5383.7, respectively.
Mining stocks were the biggest drag on the market as iron ore touched 21-month lows, falling 1.3 per cent as a group. BHP led the drop, down 1.2 per cent, while Rio shed 1.9 per cent and Fortescue 6.2 per cent.
Gold miners were the exception, jumping 2.9 per cent, while energy stocks enjoyed the surging oil price, adding 1.3 per cent.
4:01pm:China’s stocks are higher, sending the benchmark index to a six-week high, after new bank lending topped estimates and industrial production growth accelerated.
The Shanghai Composite is up 0.8 percent, the highest since April 22. The index has advanced 2 per cent this week, poised for the biggest weekly gain in two months, after the central bank cut the reserve-requirement ratio for some lenders. That has fuelled speculation the government may announce measures to support the economy.
“The market has expectations about further loosening of monetary policies and that’ll attract some buying sentiment,” said Wang Zheng, chief investment officer at Jingxi Investment Management Co. “The economic data have no surprise. It’s showing the economy is stabilising.”
Other Asian markets also rallied, with Japan’s Nikkei 0.9 per cent higher after the Bank of Japan confirmed no change to monetary policy, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng jumped 0.8 per cent in afternoon trade.
Korea’s KOSPI fell 1 per cent, and Taiwan’s TAIEX 0.1 per cent.
Chinese industrial output rose 8.8 percent in May from a year earlier, in line with estimates, and retail sales gained 12.5 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said on its website today.
Fixed-asset investment excluding rural households increased 17.2 percent in the first five months of the year, the agency said.
Local-currency loans were 870.8 billion yuan ($140 billion), the People’s Bank of China said yesterday, higher than 42 out of 43 analyst estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. M2, the broadest measure of money supply, rose 13.4 percent, compared with a median projection for 13.1 percent.
Citigroup Inc. said in a report dated yesterday that it has an overweight allocations on Chinese stocks for the “first time in years” amid signs the economy is bottoming out.


