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Dec 15 (Reuters) - Australian shares finished below 6,000 points on Friday, dragged lower by banks as the country's largest lender faced new claims from the financial crimes watchdog.
The Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (AUSTRAC) added more than 100 new claims against Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) CBA.AX for failing to comply with anti-money laundering laws, including late reporting of attempts to wire money as recently as August by an individual convicted of terror-related offences. shares fell on the news, with the Australian financials index .AXFJ dipping 0.6 percent.
CBA fell 0.6 percent, while National Australia Bank Ltd NAB.AX declined 0.4 percent.
The S&P/ASX 200 index .AXJO fell 0.2 percent or 14.300 points to 5,997.0 at the close of trade. The benchmark declined 0.2 percent on Thursday.
The drop narrowed the index's weekly rise to 0.04 percent, its fourth consecutive weekly gain and its longest weekly streak since May 2016.
Real estate stocks also piled on losses as investors took profits.
Westfield Corp WFD.AX dropped 1.5 percent for a second day of losses after it posted a record percentage gain on Wednesday. The company's shares had surged on news it would accept a $16 billion takeover offer from Unibail-Rodamco (AS:UNBP). industrial stocks were among the highest percentage gainers on the benchmark.
Transurban Group TCL.AX soared 4.8 percent to a near six-month high, while Cleanaway Waste Management Ltd CWY.AX ticked up 2.2 percent to its highest close since Feb. 2009.
In New Zealand, the benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index .NZ50 climbed 0.45 percent or 37.11 points to finish the session at a record high close of 8,360.86. The index is up 1.5 percent for the week after seven straight days of gains.
Utilities stocks accounted for most of the rise on Friday, with Contact Energy Ltd CEN.NZ surging 4.5 percent to a six-week high. Genesis Energy Ltd GNE.NZ climbed 1.6 percent to its highest level since July 25.