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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

Australian shares flat as housing-tax changes, global risks cap volatile week

(Updates to close)

* Banks extend gains, CBA advances 1.9%

Australian shares ended little changed ​on Friday, capping a volatile week as housing-tax proposals clouded the mortgage outlook, while U.S.-China talks and Middle East tensions kept investors focused on growth and inflation risks.

The S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.1% ‌to 8,630.8. ⁠The benchmark ⁠lost 1.2% for the week, its weakest performance in over three weeks.

Australia's federal budget on Tuesday ​proposed curbing negative gearing to encourage investment in new housing, raising concerns about slower mortgage demand.

Financials ​extended gains to finish up 1% after early-week losses. The subindex notched a 4.3% drop this week, their weakest run in over six months.

Top lender Commonwealth ​Bank of Australia, which suffered its steepest weekly ⁠drop earlier ‌in the week, rebounded with a 1.9% gain on the ​day.

The rebound ​is tactical rather than conviction-led, with bargain hunters stepping in after ⁠a sharp selloff, said Marc Jocum, Senior Product and Investment ​Strategist at GlobalXETFs.com.au, while flagging a "murky" outlook for banks.

Budget-linked ​changes to housing and investor lending have clouded the mortgage-growth outlook, while rising provisions and arrears suggest banks' easy-profit cycle may be fading, making August earnings the sector's next key test, Jocum added.

Real estate stocks extended gains, rising 0.4% on optimism that first-home buyer support could channel demand. The subindex closed 1.5% ‌higher.

Meanwhile, market attention has shifted to a meeting between the country's key trading partners U.S.-China, with any warming up of ties likely ​to lift ​the resource-heavy bourse.

Miners retreated ⁠3.1% on softer iron ore and copper prices, though the index still clinched a 1.7% gain for the week.

Heavyweights BHP and Rio Tinto slipped 2.6% and 3.2%, respectively, ​easing back from record highs struck in the previous sessions.

Attention now turns to next week's employment data for fresh signals on the central bank's interest-rate outlook.

New Zealand's S&P/NZX 50 edged down 0.5% to 12,965.01, extending losses to a fourth straight session. This has left the benchmark down 1.6% for the week.

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