Fresh US-China trade turmoil wipes US$26b off Australian stocks
[BENGALURU] Mining stocks led Australian shares to their worst session in over seven months on Monday, with investors slashing riskier positions as the growing trade war between the United States and China revived worries about weaker global growth.
The S&P/ASX 200 index closed 1.9 per cent, or 128.3 points, lower at 6,640.3, its fourth session in the red and the largest one-day decline since last December.
Resource stocks, Australia's biggest export sector, bore the brunt of the benchmark's A$37.77 billion (S$35.26 billion) loss in market value since Friday's close. (Calculations based on Refinitiv Eikon data)
Investors have dumped riskier assets since US President Donald Trump abruptly declared late last week that he would slap 10 per cent tariffs on US$300 billion in Chinese imports, snuffing a month-long trade truce and prompting China to warn of retaliation.
China is the biggest buyer of Australian exports. On Monday, the world's No 2 economy let its currency slide past the key seven-per-dollar level for the first time in more than a decade.
"PBOC (People's Bank of China) weaponises the renminbi... the boost to China's export sector from currency depreciation is worth attracting the ire of the Trump," said Capital Economics in a note.
The world's biggest miner BHP Group shed 3.6 per cent to close at a near two-month low, while smaller peer Fortescue Metals Group tumbled 7.2 per cent.
Heavyweight banking units lost 1.5 per cent, with the "big four" banks giving up between 0.8 per cent and 1.7 per cent.
Australian oil and gas companies also declined, with Santos giving up 2.4 per cent. However, Oil Search closed 2.9 per cent higher after the Papua New Guinea government signalled its backing for a liquefied natural gas deal in which the company is a partner.
Domestic technology stocks saw their worst session since February 2016, and data solutions provider Appen was the top loser on the main index. Declines followed sharp losses for U.S. peers on Friday as the trade war escalated.
On the economic front, focus will be on the central bank policy reviews in Australia and New Zealand this week, and on Chinese trade and inflation data.
In New Zealand, the benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index finished 0.9 per cent lower at 10,766.03.
Dairy products makers A2 Milk Co and Synlait Milk led losses, giving up 3.3 per cent and 3.7 per cent, respectively.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Capital Markets & Currencies
Why the yen is so weak and what that means for Japan
Europe: Stoxx ends lower as auto giants weigh; investors parse inflation data
US: Wall Street stocks fall as markets weigh strong wage data, Fed meeting
Japan may have spent 5.5 trillion yen on Apr 29 intervention, BOJ data suggests
Singapore stocks rise, tracking regional bourses; STI up 0.3%
Asia: Markets build on Wall Street rally, yen holds bounce