Global Markets | Australian shares end flat on US-Iran peace talk uncertainty; Rio Tinto gains

Australian shares saw little movement as investors awaited U.S.-Iran peace talk developments. Mining giant Rio Tinto bucked the trend, rising on strong first-quarter output. Meanwhile, tech and real estate sectors showed recovery in April after si...

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Australian shares saw little change on Tuesday. Investors watched for news on U.S.-Iran peace talks.
Australian shares ended largely unchanged on Tuesday, as investors awaited clarity on U.S.-Iran peace talks, while mining major Rio Tinto gained after reporting an upbeat first-quarter output.

The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index eased ‌3.9 points ⁠to finish at ⁠8,949.40 points in yet another tepid trading session that saw it drift within a 100-point range.

Investor appetite remained subdued as a second round of peace talks in the Middle East remains uncertain, as the end of a two-week ceasefire approaches.


Reports citing an Iranian official suggested Tehran was considering attending peace talks with the United States in Pakistan, but added that no decision had ⁠been made.

Iranian ‌Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said that "continued violations of the ceasefire" by the U.S. are a major obstacle to continuing the diplomatic process.

Tony ⁠Sycamore, a market analyst at IG, attributed the session's "tame declines" to "traders balancing renewed geopolitical risks against persistent hopes that diplomacy could still deliver an extended or even permanent ceasefire deal".
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Miners slipped 0.2%, with BHP losing 0.3%. Gold miners lost 0.5%.

Rio Tinto shares gained 0.8% after the miner reported higher first-quarter iron ore sales and copper production.

Energy sub-index lost 0.9% as oil prices fell on expectations of peace talks between the ‌U.S. and Iran.

Financials slid 0.1% with Commonwealth Bank of Australia and ANZ falling 0.3% and 1.7%, respectively.
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Sycamore also pointed to investors "taking opportunity" to rotate into sectors that were ⁠badly bruised in the first quarter.

Tech stocks, which lost a whopping 28% in the March quarter, have advanced 15% so far in April, while real estate stocks have gained about 9% after plunging 17% in the prior three months.
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Across the Tasman Sea, the New Zealand benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index fell 0.1% to 12,932.33 points.

The island nation's annual inflation was unchanged at 3.1% in the first quarter, above the central bank's target range, data showed on Tuesday.

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