Shares of materials and resources companies were higher, with shares of Rio Tinto, and Fortescue were up in a range of 1% to 2%. BHP Billiton gained more than 4% after the miner said it will return A$10.4 billion to shareholders, through an off-market A$5.2 billion share buyback that it will start immediately, and the remaining A$5.2 billion through a special dividend to be calculated on December 17.
Shares of banks and financials were mostly higher, with National Australia Bank shares up 1% after the lender said its full-year cash profit declined 14% on restructuring costs and customer remediation, while statutory profit rose 5%. Commonwealth Bank's shares fell almost 1% after it said it is issuing debt through a hybrid capital notes offer to raise about A$750 million. Westpac was down almost 1% and ANZ Banking was lower by 0.5%.
Shares of wealth manager AMP inclined 10% after reports the country's biggest investment bank Macquarie Group is mulling a takeover of the embattled firm, reeling under Royal Commission inquiry.
Shares of energy companies were mostly weak after crude oil prices fell for a third straight session overnight. WTI crude for December declined $0.87 or 1.3% to close at $65.31 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Woodside Petroleum and Santos were lower in a range of 0.5% to 1%, while Oil Search was up 0.2%.
ECONOMIC NEWS: The latest survey from the Australian Industry Group revealed that the manufacturing sector in Australia continued to expand in October, albeit at a slightly slower rate, with a Performance of Manufacturing Index score of 58.3. That's down from 59.0, although it remains well above the boom-or-bust line of 50 that separates expansion from contraction.
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CURRENCY: Australian Dollar was lower against greenback and other major currencies on Thursday. The Australian dollar was quoted at $0.7079, down from $0.7089 on Wednesday.
OFFSHORE MARKET: US stock market closed higher on Wednesday, with investors cautiously moving cash into beaten-down equities that are trading at their cheapest levels in more than two years even as headline risks related to U.S.-China trade rising interest rates and weakening corporate earnings continue to challenge sentiment. The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 241.12 points or 1% to 25,115.76, the Nasdaq soared 144.25 points or 2% to 7,305.90 and the S&P 500 surged up 29.11 points or 1.1% to 2,711.74
European markets ended higher on Wednesday. The French CAC 40 Index surged up by 2.3%. The German DAX Index and the U.K.'s FTSE 100 Index jumped 1.4% and 1.3%, respectively.
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