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Yesterday, the Aussie share market continued its positive streak in February, closing 1.2% higher to pop back over 7,000 points. We also heard from RBA Governor Philip Lowe, who stated that a rate rise later this year was a plausible situation. And BHP (ASX:BHP) once again became the largest company on the Aussie share market after officially completing the unification of its Australian and UK listings.
In sector performances, nearly all sectors closed in the green, with the energy and materials sectors gaining the most. On the ASX200 stock leader board, eight mining stocks were amongst the best performers. Auckland International Airport (ASX:AIA) pushed 5.4% higher and Worley (ASX:WOR) gained about 5%, benefiting from surging oil prices. Meanwhile, the worst performing stocks included Credit Corp Group (ASX:CCP), Block (ASX:SQ2) and Amcor (ASX:AMC). Amcor fell 3.5% despite announcing a 12% jump in its first-half sales.
The most traded stocks by Bell Direct clients yesterday included software company BrainChip (ASX:BRN), which topped the list, lifting over 6% after announcing the receipt of another patent in the US. Another highly traded stock was Mineral Resources (ASX:MIN), its share price gained 2.2% after the company reported that the Western Australian government is set to increase iron ore export capacity at the Port of Port Hedland.
In the US, stocks rose for the fourth straight day, the Dow jumping over 200 points, the S&P500 climbing nearly 1% and the Nasdaq pushing 0.5% higher. The stock that led the gains was Alphabet, after its quarterly results beat analyst expectations. And Facebook-parent Meta shares have tumbled more than 15% in extended trading after a disappointing earnings report was released, where they also gave a weaker than expected forecast.
Today, the futures are suggesting the Aussie share market will open 0.09% higher this morning.
What to watch today:
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