The ASX 200 recovered from an early slump after Wall Street's technology rout, with banks and healthcare stocks driving the rebound despite disappointing Australian trade figures.
The ASX 200 trades flat at 8722 as of 3:30 pm AEST.
The ASX 200 was crunched on the open today, falling 66 points (-0.76%) to a three-week low of 8656.20 before fresh buying – likely driven by the start of the new financial year – entered the market and helped it claw back all of its early losses.
The initial sell-off came after a rough night on Wall Street for technology stocks, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX) tumbling 6.27%. That move spilled over into Asian equity markets, with the Korean stock market diving nearly 7% at the open, giving back a small slice of last financial year's 180% surge.
In today's economic news, Australia recorded a trade deficit of A$3.0 billion in May, swinging from an A$1.4 billion surplus in April. Exports drove the deterioration, with gold exports the largest drag, down 35% month-on-month (MoM), while iron ore exports also softened. Goods imports rose 2.6% month-on-month, led by stronger imports of capital goods (+8.2%) and consumption goods (+7.9%), pointing to resilient domestic demand.
The consumer discretionary sector endured a third day of profit-taking after its 24% rally from the mid-May low into Tuesday's high.
Temple & Webster dropped 6.98% to $5.60
Harvey Norman fell 3.44% to $4.63
Guzman y Gomez lost 3.12% to $20.64
Wesfarmers slipped 3.70% to $87.17 after a US investment bank downgraded the company from Neutral to Sell.
Crude oil extended its slide, falling 0.70% to a fresh cycle low of $67.56 in Asian trade. This saw the ASX 200 energy sector snap a four-day winning streak.
Karoon Energy dipped 2.82% to $1.38
Ampol squandered 1.95% to $1.26
Santos declined 1.53% to $7.08
Beach Energy lost 1.18% to $0.84.
The big banks, battered yesterday, found buyers today.
NAB jumped 3.31% to $38.21
Westpac lifted 1.70% to $35.28
Macquarie gained 1.31% to $250.43
ANZ climbed 0.55% to $34.66
CBA edged 0.37% higher to $161.32.
The ASX 200 health care sector offered support as it closes in on a seventh straight week of gains – although it still has a long way to go before erasing last financial year's heavy losses.
ResMed lifted 3.06% to $29.28
Pro Medicus gained 1.55% to $206.01
Cochlear rose 0.36% to $118.90.
Gold climbed 0.80% today to $4062 ahead of tonight's critical United States (US) non-farm payrolls report, which comes just before the 4 July long weekend.
Ora Banda jumped 7.35% to $1.10
Catalyst Metals rose 4.16% to $5.01
Resolute Mining lifted 4.05% to $0.96.
It has been a mixed day for the iron ore giants despite iron ore futures rising 0.74% to US$98.25 on the Singapore Exchange.
Mineral Resources gained 1.77% to $64.32
Rio Tinto edged 0.11% higher to $170.98
Fortescue slipped 0.75% to $19.09
BHP fell 0.48% to $59.63 after lodging an application to restart the Cerro Colorado copper mine in northern Chile.
Nevertheless, the tech shakeout was enough to weigh on local information technology (IT) names:
NEXTDC dropped 5.09% to $13.90
Megaport fell 3.35% to $20.08
WiseTech declined 2.2% to $32.16.
Objective Corporation jumped 13.56% to $7.67, recovering almost half of the approximately 35% it lost yesterday after the Department of Defence declined to renew a long-standing contract.
The rejection from the mid-June high of 8983.8 has seen the ASX 200 remain confined to the broad 9000 - 8500 trading range it has occupied over the past 13 weeks.
Looking ahead, we see scope for the ASX 200 to continue trading sideways within this range for a few more weeks while remaining open-minded as to which direction the eventual breakout will take.
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