Australia Market falls 0.9%

Capital Market 

Headline indices of financial market nosedived on Tuesday, 18 December 2018, due to profit taking across the board on following a similarly widespread sell-off on Wall Street overnight amid heightened concerns about a slowing global economy. Almost all sectors declined, with shares in financial, energy, materials, technology, healthcare, consumer and industrial sectors being notable losers. In late afternoon trade, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index dropped 50.57 points, or 0.9%, to 5,607.70 points, while the broader index shed 54.96 points, or 0.96%, to 5,677.90 points.

US stocks hit nine-month lows overnight as a number of geopolitical concerns weighed on sentiment. Investors are also cautious ahead of the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision Thursday morning. The market is pricing in a 70% chance of a US rate hike however economists will pay most attention to the tone of Fed Jerome Powell's statement.

Many investors now expect signs of economic turbulence would prompt the Fed to signal a slowdown in the pace of tightening next year.

Fears of a potential partial shutdown next week should not receive the necessary funding to build a wall with is also a concern.

Shares of sector tumbled the most among sectoral peers, after fell on US supply concerns and fears over global economic growth. US crude fell to as low as $49.01 per barrel on Monday, its lowest level since September last year and last stood at $49.33, down 1.1% on the day. Among stocks, Origin, Woodside, Oil Search, and were down between 1% and 3%.

Shares in have tanked as much as 7.6% to a new four-year low after its weighed heavily on a bleak earnings outlook. The company's unaudited profit guidance for the year ending 2018 showed replacement cost operating profit had dropped to between $533 million and $553 million, down by about 15% at the mid point. The company's historic cost profit after tax is now $530 million to $550 million, a fall of about 13% compared with 2017, while fuels and infrastructure earnings are set to decline 14% from $666 million thanks to unplanned third-quarter outages at the in Queensland, and a lower regional refining margin.

Shares of materials and resources were softer. eked out a 0.2% gain, while Rio Tinto, and lost between 0.5 and 1.7%. fell 4.4%.

Shares of financials were also lower, with and New Zealand Banking Group lead the losses for the big four lenders, down 2.5%, while lost the least, 1.1% lower.

Among individual stocks, (CAR) dropped 1% after announcing a likely $48 million impairment on its share in CAR has blamed this on legislation changes and tighter credit market conditions.

climbed nearly 3% after confirming its intention to restart paying dividends in FY19 for the first time since October 2017. The building products company also announced the $840 million sale of the Formica Group to Netherlands-based

CURRENCY: Australian Dollar, seen as a proxy for China-related trades, edged up against greenback on Tuesday. dollar was quoted at 71.86 US cents, up from 71.73 US cents on Monday.

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First Published: Tue, December 18 2018. 10:30 IST