The Australian share market closed lower, led down by falls in mining-related sectors.
At 1615 AEDT on Monday, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was down 11.8 points, or 0.24 per cent, at 4,959.5 points, while the broader All Ordinaries index had fallen 9.1 points, or 0.18 per cent, to 4,980.3 points.
On the ASX 24, the March share price index futures contract was down 16 points at 4,919 points, with 18,233 contracts traded.
The local bourse opened down about 0.1 per cent but edged into positive territory by noon AEDT before slipping back into the red during afternoon trading.
CMC Markets senior trader Tim Waterer said the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index spent much of the day “going through the motions” as investors awaited further direction from the latest corporate earnings results later in the week.
“Narrow trading ranges and a general lack of buying conviction resulted in a listless performance from the local bourse, with any ASX200 aspirations of a move to the 5,000 level postponed for the time being,” Mr Waterer said in a research note.
The standout performer was JB Hi-Fi, with the electronics retailer soaring 17.08 per cent, or $1.88, to $12.89 after reporting that its first half net profit had risen three per cent to $82 million.
JB Hi-Fi, which was the best-performing stock on the S&P/ASX200, forecast a seven per cent rise in full year net profit.
“That’s an excellent performance by JB in a pretty inclement, overall, retail environment,” Lonsec private client adviser Michael Heffernan said.
The consumer discretionary sector rose a market-leading 1.54 per cent on Monday, according to IRESS data.
Among the other retailers, Harvey Norman advanced 5.91 per cent, or 13 cents, to $2.33, Myer jumped 3.09 per cent, or eight cents, to $2.67 and David Jones was up 2.66 per cent, or seven cents, at $2.70.
The materials sector – a large slice of the market – fell 0.48 per cent and gold stocks were down 0.56 per cent.
BHP Billiton slipped 24 cents to $37.71, Rio was off 15 cents at $69.45 and gold miner Newcrest backpedalled 37 cents to $24.15.
Insurance Australia Group said about 14,300 claims related to ex-tropical cyclone Oswald and bushfires in NSW, Victoria and Tasmania could cost the company up to $175 million.
IAG was down two cents at $5.17.
The spot price of gold in Sydney at 1615 AEDT was $US1,668.00 per fine ounce, down $US4.03 from Friday’s local close of $US1,672.03 per ounce.
National turnover was 1.41 billion securities worth $3.55 billion, with 477 stocks up, 483 down and 380 unchanged.