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Australia, NZ shares track global peers lower on ECB official's hawkish remarks

Published 30/01/2018, 04:47 pm
© Reuters.  Australia, NZ shares track global peers lower on ECB official's hawkish remarks
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* Financials hit as yield allure potentially fades

* Materials hurt as Chinese iron ore futures slip

* Energy index shadows oil prices lower (Updates to close)

Jan 30 (Reuters) - Australian shares dipped on Tuesday to close at their lowest in more than a week, after global equity markets fell on hawkish remarks by a European Central Bank official, fuelling expectations for stimulus cuts as the world economy improves.

Global equity markets eased on Monday and U.S. Treasury yields surged to more than three-year highs, following the ECB official's comments. MKTS/GLOB

"The quantitative easing premium coming out of Japan and Europe is helping global bond markets and is pushing bond yields higher," said Chris Weston, institutional lender at IG Markets.

"So effectively, when you look at the inflows, what you get from holding Australian financials with high yield becomes relatively less attractive."

Weston said stocks become less attractive when investors can get higher fixed-income yields.

The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index .AXJO fell 52.6 points, or 0.9 percent, to 6,022.8. It had added 0.4 percent on Monday.

The Australian financial index .AXFJ closed down 0.6 percent, with its biggest drag, Macquarie Group Ltd MQG.AX , losing 1.6 percent.

Materials slipped and were the biggest weight on the benchmark, underpinned by a fall in Chinese iron ore futures. Global miner BHP Billiton (LON:BLT) BHP.AX dipped 1.3 percent to a near four-week low, while rival Rio Tinto (LON:RIO) Ltd RIO.AX slid 0.7 percent. IRONORE/

Hurt by a continued fall in oil prices, the energy index .AXEJ closed at its lowest in a week, with oil and gas company Woodside Petroleum Ltd WPL.AX dipping 2.2 percent. O/R

In New Zealand, the benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index .NZ50 declined 0.4 percent, or 29.01 points, to 8,298.58.

Consumer staples led the decliners, with dairy firm a2 Milk Company Ltd ATM.NZ falling 2.6 percent.

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