INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Australian equities weakened sharply on Thursday, as the country's oldest lender Westpac Banking Corp lost over 1 per cent as it fielded
investor rage over an alleged money laundering scandal.
The S-P/ASX 200 index closed down 0.7 per cent, or 43.8 points, at 6,708.8
The "Big Four" banks lost between 0.7 per cent and 1.3 per cent.
Westpac said it was "shattered" by a money laundering lawsuit over payments
it unwittingly facilitated among suspected child exploiters and apologised to all affected as it faced a fire storm of shareholder
criticism.
The lender has seen about A$8.6 billion ($5.84 billion) wiped off its market value in the three weeks since it was slapped with a
lawsuit citing 23 million breaches of anti-money laundering laws, including accusations of enabling child exploitation payments.
Adding to
woes, Westpac shareholders voted against the company's executive pay plans for a second year running.
Separately, Westpac and Australia
and New Zealand Banking Group were excluded from a federal contract for a government home-loan scheme, while New Zealand's central bank
said ANZ's local unit needs to improve its internal risk controls.
Amid the banking storm, the United States Federal Reserve signalling
that borrowing costs will not change anytime soon did little to improve sentiment in Australia.
Energy units retreated 0.5 per cent, with
sector heavyweight Santos Ltd down 0.2 per cent.
Oil and gas explorer FAR Ltd plunged more than 24 per cent to its lowest close since 2014
as it announced the completion of a A$146 million placement to fund development of a Senegal oil field project.
Elsewhere, Lynas Corp, the
world's only major rare earths producer outside China, jumped 9.7 per cent and was the top gainer on the ASX benchmark, after Reuters
reported that the United States Army plans to fund construction of rare earths processing facilities in the United States.
Meanwhile, New
Zealand's benchmark S-P/NZX 50 index ended higher for the third straight session, adding 0.1 per cent, or 16.02 points, to
11,307.98.
Restaurant Brands New Zealand Ltd, the best performer on the bourse, gained 4 per cent.