
Australia shares tread water ahead of domestic inflation data
The S&P/ASX 200 index was largely flat at 8,703.9 points by 0016 GMT. It had closed 0.1% higher on Tuesday.
The focus remains on the domestic quarterly inflation data, which will either make or break the case for an interest rate cut by the Reserve Bank of Australia next month.
Forecasts pointed to a 0.7% quarterly rise in the policy-relevant trimmed mean measure, slightly above the central bank's expectations.
On the Sydney bourse, traders remained cautious, with technology stocks dipping about 0.6%, tracking overnight losses on Wall Street after some disappointing corporate earnings.
Logistics software maker WiseTech Global fell as much as 1.5%, while Xero shed about 1%.
Real estate stocks eased 0.2%, with sector major Goodman Group losing about 0.4%.
However, energy stocks rose 0.7%, mirroring a rise in oil prices as U.S. President Donald Trump ramped up pressure on Russia over its war in Ukraine and on hopes that a trade war between the U.S. and its key trading partners was easing.
Financials gained 0.2%, led by a 0.4% rise in the country's largest lender, Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
Among individual companies, lithium miner Pilbara Minerals climbed as much as 3.9% after an upbeat fourth-quarter production update and a strong 2026 output forecast.
New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index traded flat at 12,934.41 points.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
30 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
US stocks up as market shrugs off tariff increases
NEW YORK: Wall Street stocks rose early Thursday, extending an upward run as markets shrugged off a spate of fresh US tariff increases that went into effect at midnight. Under a White House policy that had been telegraphed, import duties rose from 10 percent to levels between 15 percent and 41 percent for a list of trading partners. About 20 minutes into trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.4 percent at 44,361.65. The broad-based S&P 500 climbed 0.5 percent to 6,379.11, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index gained 0.9 percent to 21,357.96, above its all-time closing record. Wall Street boosted by earnings, Fed rate cut hopes In the last day alone, US President Donald Trump has also announced higher tariffs on India and 100-percent levy on semiconductor companies that don't build in the United States. But investors have been embracing a view that the US economy remains on solid footing and that the impact of levies has not been as bad as feared. 'The chip tariffs certainly sound terrible on the headline,' said Steve Sosnick of Interactive Brokers. 'But there's so many exemptions … so it's perceived to be having so many loopholes that it's not bad news.' Investor mood 'has been relentlessly positive, interpreting the news flow like a glass half-full day,' Sosnick said. The early gains on Wall Street came as the Bank of England cut its key interest rate by a quarter point to four percent, the lowest level in 2.5 years. Among individual companies, Intel dropped 1.3 percent as Trump called on the chipmaker's CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, to resign after a Republican Senator raised national security concerns over his links to firms in China. Eli Lilly plunged 13.1 percent despite reporting a near-doubling of profits on higher revenues. The drugmaker also released results of clinical testing of a weight loss pill that looked positive 'on the surface,' but indicated less impact than candidates by other companies, said


Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Ripple to buy stablecoin platform Rail for $200 million
Ripple will buy stablecoin payments platform Rail for $200 million, the company said on Thursday, weeks after U.S. President Donald Trump signed a law that raised expectations cryptocurrency tokens are about to enter the mainstream. Ripple, a crypto company that issues the token XRP as well as its own stablecoin called RLUSD, has invested heavily in stablecoin infrastructure in recent months. The acquisition - which will close in the fourth quarter of this year pending regulatory approvals - will enable Ripple and Rail to 'deliver the most comprehensive stablecoin payments solution available in the market,' it said. 'As regulations become more clear and the space has grown and matured, this opportunity for stablecoin payments is really ripe, and the acquisition of Rail just really solidifies our market leadership in stablecoin payments,' said Monica Long, president of Ripple in an interview. Toronto-based Rail, backed by Galaxy Ventures and Accomplice, uses stablecoins to deploy cross-border payments. It says its transactions are cheaper and can clear in just hours, compared to longer settlement times for fiat payments. Rail says on its website that the company is responsible for 10% of all global stablecoin-based payment activity. Trump in July signed a bill into law to create a federal regulatory regime for stablecoins, which analysts said could allow digital assets to become an everyday way to make payments and move money. Stablecoins are designed to maintain a constant value, usually a 1:1 U.S. dollar peg, and their use has exploded, notably by crypto traders moving funds between tokens. Ripple said in April that it would also buy multi-asset prime broker Hidden Road in a $1.25 billion deal, one of its largest acquisitions yet, which it said would enhance RLUSD's utility. Ripple launched RLUSD, a stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar, last year, as it sought to disrupt the market dominated by Tether and Circle's USDC.


Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Bank of England cuts rate as keeps watch over tariffs
LONDON: The Bank of England on Thursday cut its key interest rate by a quarter point to four percent, the lowest level in 2.5 years, as it bids to boost a UK economy still threatened by US tariffs. Alongside the expected decision, the BoE forecast British economic growth to hit 1.25 percent this year, slightly better than the central bank's previous estimate of one percent. 'The direct impact of US tariffs is milder than feared but more general tariff-related uncertainty still weighs on sentiment,' the BoE said in a statement. London and Washington reached an agreement in May to cut levies of more than 10 percent imposed by US President Donald Trump on certain UK-made items imported by the United States, notably vehicles. The quarter-point cut Thursday was the BoE's fifth such reduction since starting a trimming cycle in August 2024. Bank of England keeps rates steady, sees further loosening as jobs market weakens 'Interest rates are still on a downward path, but any future rate cuts will need to be made gradually and carefully,' its governor Andrew Bailey said following Thursday's decision. The BoE's main task is to keep Britain's annual inflation rate at 2.0 percent but the latest official data showed it had jumped unexpectedly to an 18-month high in June. The Consumer Prices Index increased to 3.6 percent as motor fuel and food prices stayed high. Weak economy Latest official figures also show that Britain's economy unexpectedly contracted for a second month running in May and UK unemployment is at a near four-year high of 4.7 percent. This is largely down to Prime Minister Keir Starmer's Labour government increasing a UK business tax from April, the same month that the country became subject to Trump's 10-percent baseline tariff on most goods. Finance minister Rachel Reeves welcomed the BoE's latest rate cut. 'This fifth interest rate cut since the election (win by Labour in July 2024) is welcome news, helping bring down the cost of mortgages and loans for families and businesses,' she said in a statement. The US Federal Reserve last week kept interest rates unchanged, defying strong political pressure from Trump to slash borrowing costs in a bid to boost the world's biggest economy. Asked about US tariffs following the decision, Fed Chair Jerome Powell told a press conference: 'We're still a ways away from seeing where things settle down.' The European Central Bank is meanwhile widely expected to keep rates unchanged at its next meeting, with eurozone inflation around the ECB's two-percent target. But that could change, according to some economists, based on how Trump's tariffs affect the single-currency bloc.