Australia Stocks Decline, Snapping Three-Day Run Higher
October 21 2016 - 1:40AM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE--Broad declines by energy shares and sharp falls among
a few stocks weighed on the Australian equities market Friday,
leaving it modestly lower for the week.
Snapping a run higher the past three days, the S&P/ASX 200
finished down 11.8 points, or 0.2%, at 5430.3. That left the index
almost 0.1% lower for the week, after dropping 0.6% last week.
Oil and gas stocks were under pressure as crude-oil prices fell
again in Asian trade after the U.S. dollar strengthened following
comments from Russia's top producer that it could lift output if
demand required.
After hitting a fresh one-year high Wednesday, oil has been
retreating as traders consider the global supply glut. Igor Sechin,
chief executive of Russia's Rosneft Oil Co., said in comments
Thursday that his country has the capacity to raise output by as
much as 200 million metric tons a year, or four million barrels a
day, according to Russian media.
Woodside Petroleum Ltd. fell 0.9% for the day, Oil Search Ltd.
dropped 2.3% and Origin Energy Ltd. was 0.9% lower. Santos,
however, gained 0.5% after releasing third-quarter production and
revenue figures that showed growth compared with last year thanks
to higher liquefied-natural-gas output.
Hospital operator Healthscope Ltd. slumped 19% after it said it
had experienced slower-than-expected revenue growth in the first
quarter of its financial year. Ramsay Heath Care Ltd., another
ASX-listed hospital operator, declined 5.9%.
The Australian shares of casino operator Skycity Entertainment
Group Ltd. were 13% weaker after it cautioned it may face a
financial hit from the fallout over the detention of 18 Crown
Resorts employees in China. The New Zealand company's shares have
fallen 19% on the ASX this week, while Crown's lost 16% despite
recovering 1.6% on Friday.
The major banks were mostly higher, led by a 0.9% gain by
Westpac Banking Corp. and a 0.8% push higher by Australia & New
Zealand Banking Group Ltd. Macquarie said in a research report that
it believed the big banks, other than National Australia Bank Ltd.,
can sustain their dividends even in the current low-growth
environment. NAB's shares dipped slightly.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 21, 2016 02:25 ET (06:25 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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