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Australian shares rise to record close as investors shrug off US tariff fears

Australian shares rise to record close as investors shrug off US tariff fears

Mint4 days ago
CSL hit its highest level since May 29
July 15 - Australian shares settled at a record high closing level on Tuesday, driven by gains in banks, healthcare and technology stocks, as investors shrugged off tariff worries.
The S&P/ASX 200 index ended 0.7% higher at 8,630.30 points. The benchmark traded flat on Monday.
Investors were unfazed by tariff concerns, having grown accustomed to U.S. President Donald Trump's unpredictable trade announcements and last-minute reversals.
"Traders now view the tariff threats as a bargaining tool and perhaps believe they'll settle at something digestible," said Philip Pepe, senior analyst with Shaw and Partners.
In Sydney, heavyweight financials led the surge with a 0.8% rise with the "Big Four" banks rising between 0.2% and 0.7%.
Citi analysts said the improving earnings outlook was boosting banks' shares, as the near-term prospects appeared more promising.
"We expect earnings to hold up this year as the impact from lower rates takes time to manifest in bank earnings," Citi analysts wrote in a note.
IT stocks rose 2.3%, having gained 2.5% earlier in the session. The sub-index mirrored its U.S. peers, with tech-heavy Nasdaq ending at a record high.
On the Sydney bourse, tech giant WiseTech rose 2.1%.
Healthcare stocks added 2.1%, led by biotech giant CSL, which rose 3.6% to hit the highest since May 29 after it confirmed that it will trim its research and development division.
Among other sectors trading in green, energy stocks rose 0.6% while consumer staples advanced 0.5%.
The mining sub-index, however, fell 0.5% on profit-taking, snapping three sessions of consecutive gains.
Mining giant BHP Group fell 1% while iron ore miner Rio Tinto lost 1.5%, a day ahead of its quarterly production results.
New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index ended the day flat at 12,689.63 points.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
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