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Australian shares fall as miners and banks drag on Mideast tensions

Australian shares dropped on Monday as investors waited for "clearer signs" on the prospects of a permanent ceasefire.

By 0021 GMT, the S&P/ASX 200 index had fallen 0.5% to?8,745.80 and was heading for its fifth consecutive session of losses. The benchmark index fell 1.8% in the past week, its biggest weekly drop since mid-March. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that Iran can call to negotiate an end of the two-month conflict, and stressed that Tehran will never be able to?acquire a nuclear weapon. This came after Trump, on Saturday, cancelled a planned U.S. ambassador visit?to Islamabad.

Financials in the United States fell by 0.6%, with the four largest banks falling between 0.6% to 1%

Investors are now looking to the Reserve Bank of Australia's meeting next week for clues on the country's rate trajectory.

After the copper price fell on Friday, miners lost 0.3%. Mining giant BHP also dropped 1%. Energy companies lost 1.6%. This was the worst session of a week. Origin Energy, a power producer, fell as much as 4.5% after reporting a quarterly revenue drop of 9%.

Gold?stocks rose 0.5% on Friday, bucking the trend of broader losses. Tech stocks gained?0.7% on the Nasdaq record-setting Friday close. Megaport, a network-as -a-service company, announced a contract for a 36-month period worth $25 million. The firm's shares jumped up to 9.5% and topped the subindex. Atlas Arteria shares jumped up to 15.5% in company news after the 'IFM Global Infrastructure Fund' launched a takeover offer, valuing Atlas Arteria at A$6.89 Billion. ($4.92 billion).

New Zealand's markets were closed on Monday because of a public holiday.

(source: Reuters)