ASX closes flat as miners outshine banks; gold stocks rally
The numbers
The Australian sharemarket has shrugged off signs of weakness in the world's biggest economy to close flat, as a rally in mining stocks helped offset declines in the major banks and energy companies.
The S&P/ASX 200 closed 1.7 points higher on Monday, at 8663.70 points, reversing a fall in the index earlier in the day. Six of the market's 11 sectors fell, and the weakest sectors for the day were energy, financials and industrials.
The flat performance followed a slump on Wall Street on Friday, as investors reacted to surprisingly weak figures on US jobs growth and the latest developments in US President Donald Trump's trade war. The Australian dollar was fetching US64.83¢ at 4.50pm AEST.
The lifters
Miners posted a strong session, buoyed by a higher iron ore price and strength in the gold price. Global mining giant BHP rose 0.9 per cent, Fortescue was up 1.5 per cent and Rio Tinto gained 0.4 per cent. Gold miners performed particularly well after a rise in the price of the precious metal. Evolution Mining jumped 2.6 per cent and Northern Star Resources surged 5.6 per cent.
Shares in Endeavour – the company that runs Dan Murphy's and BWS – jumped 3 per cent after executive chairman Ari Mervis suddenly quit his role over 'disagreements with the board' as he edged closer to handing over the keys of the business to incoming chief executive Jayne Hrdlicka.
Consumer staple stocks also had a solid day: supermarket giant Woolworths rose 1.3 per cent, and rival Coles lifted 1.7 per cent.

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

AU Financial Review
11 minutes ago
- AU Financial Review
India-US oil spat could delay Albanese-Trump meeting
A deepening spat between the US and India could cancel this year's Quad leaders' summit, potentially delaying a planned meeting between Donald Trump and Anthony Albanese and undermining the region's premier democratic bloc against China's rise. The Albanese government is concerned by the escalating tensions after US President Donald Trump threatened to slug Indian exports to America with an extra 25 percentage points in tariffs unless it curbs purchases of Russian crude oil.


Canberra Times
11 minutes ago
- Canberra Times
Modi backs Indian farmers amid Trump's tariff salvo
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi says he will not compromise the interests of the country's farmers even if he has to pay a heavy price, in his first comments after US President Donald Trump's salvo of a 50 per cent tariff on Indian goods.


Canberra Times
11 minutes ago
- Canberra Times
Labor opens door to PwC after tax scandal
"This government has betrayed the Australian people who had very rightly held the expectation that the rogue consulting firm PwC would be held to account for colluding with foreign multinationals to defraud our tax system," Senator Pocock said.