Australian stocks slip on oil, metals; NZ down

[BENGALURU] Australian stocks were beaten lower on Friday by a downturn in commodity prices, especially oil, after the extension of output curbs by OPEC disappointed investors who hoped for larger cuts.

The S&P/ASX 200 index fell 41.13 points or 0.71 per cent to 5,748.5 by 0304 GMT.

Oil prices tumbled 5 per cent on Thursday, their biggest daily per centage slide since early March.

The local energy index fell as much as 2.63 per cent, its biggest intraday slide in nearly three weeks.

Shares of oil companies such as Woodside Petroleum and Oil Search dropped nearly 3 per cent.

For BHP Billiton, a major iron ore miner that has increased its exposure to oil in recent years, it was bad news all around - Chinese iron ore futures slumped 4 per cent on Thursday, falling for a third day in a row, while three-months LME copper shed nearly 0.2 per cent on Friday.

Spot iron ore prices were on course to post their third weekly fall in four, pressured by plentiful supply in top consumer China and a retreat in Chinese steel prices.

A combination of those factors battered BHP shares, which fell as much as 3.06 per cent, their biggest intraday slip in three weeks.

Other iron ore miners followed suit - Fortescue Metals Group slumped to its lowest in around two weeks, while Rio Tinto fell as much as 2.36 per cent.

The metals index, which tracks 38 mid to large-cap mining companies, fell as much as 2.3 per cent, its biggest intraday decline in three weeks.

Financials continued to decline, led down by sliding share prices of "Big Four" banks. Wealth manager AMP Ltd tumbled 1.4 per cent.

Another loser early Friday was Telstra, off a per cent, after the competition watchdog's decision on regulation of high-speed internet services was seen increasing the chance of more competition.

Danial Moradi, an equity strategist with Lonsec, said he expects a "positive end to the month" for Australian shares as most US indices are at all-time highs. "We can probably expect a positive performance in June as well, the way that the US markets are heading." New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index dipped 0.07 per cent or 5.46 points to 7,429.01, led by utilities.

Entertainment company Skycity Entertainment was the index's worst performer, down 2.0 per cent at one point, its biggest intraday slide in over a month.

Electricity-retailer Meridian Energy slipped as much as 1.71 per cent.

REUTERS

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