MELBOURNE/WELLINGTON, May 2 (Reuters) - Australia and New Zealand shares fell on Monday, hauled down by heavyweight banks after no.3 lender Westpac Banking Corp delivered a weaker-than-expected half year profit due to a rise in sour loans.
The S&P/ASX 200 index .AXJO was down 40.52 points, or 0.8 percent, at 5,211.90 by 0301 GMT.
New Zealand shares .NZ50 were down 28.01 ppoints, or 0.4 percent, at 6,792.57.
Westpac WBC.AX was the biggest loser in both markets, as it kicked off bank reporting season on a disappointing note.
Its shares dropped as much as 5.7 percent to a three-week low after it reported a 3 percent rise in first-half cash profit, which missed forecasts as bad debt charges rose. rest of the big four banks all fell more than 3 percent, ahead of first-half results from Australia and New Zealand Banking Group ANZ.AX on Tuesday and National Australia Bank NAB.AX on Thursday.
Virgin Australia Holdings VAH.AX fell 2.9 percent after flagging it expects to report a pre-tax loss in the current half and would cut capacity due to weak consumer demand, the mining slump and uncertainty around a federal election. group Tabcorp Holdings TAH.AX slid more than 3 percent to a one-month low after its third quarter wagering and media revenue rose just 0.5 percent, well below growth in turnover, as its customers had big wins betting on horse races.
Defying market gloom, top telecommunications company Telstra Corp TLS.AX jumped 2 percent after saying it would hand back at least A$1.5 billion ($1.1 billion) to shareholders, from the sale of most of its stake in Chinese car sales web site Autohome Inc ATHM.N . law firm Slater & Gordon SGH.AX leapt as much as 131 percent, its biggest gain in nine years, after its lenders agreed to restructure its debt, giving it two years to improve its performance before the closest loan deadline. more individual stocks activity click on STXBZ
In New Zealand, Z Energy ZEL.NZ fell 0.89 percent as investors took profits after the petrol retailer jumped 11.2 percent to a record high on Friday on the news that regulators had allowed the company's acquisition of Chevron (NYSE:CVX) New Zealand. New Zealand AIR.NZ led gains, bouncing back after six sessions of losses as investors began to consider the stock might have been oversold and ahead of the company's investor roadshow on Tuesday.