Energy stocks bucked the weakness on the Australian sharemarket on Tuesday, as oil and gas producers continue to benefit from a rally in oil prices caused by supply shortages.
The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index lost ground throughout the day on Tuesday, with a drop in afternoon trade causing it to close 1.47 per cent lower, at 7275 points.
The weakness was widespread, with falls across miners, banks, healthcare and retail stocks, but energy shares gave investors some rare good news.
As the price of Brent oil hit US$80 a barrel, the highest level since October 2018, Woodside jumped 5 per cent to $25.03, Oil Search up 7 per cent to $4.40, Origin Energy rose and Santos rose 5.6 per cent to $7.12.
Beach Energy, which on Monday said it had signed a deal to sell liquified natural gas to BP, shot up 10.5 per cent to $1.36.
Senior investment advisor at Shaw and Partners, Adam Dawes, said the energy sector was one of the worst performers in the market last financial year, but share prices in the sector were now benefiting from higher oil prices and strong demand from investors.
“The energy sector is the only bright spark,” Mr Dawes said. “The oil price has started to tick up a bit, and that’s helped people get behind the oil space.“
Outside the energy sector, Bureau of Statistics figures showed lockdowns hit the economy hard in August, with retail sales falling 1.7 per cent in the month, led by weakness in NSW, Victoria and the ACT.
The drop in consumer stocks included a 2 per cent fall in Wesfarmers shares while Woolworths shares lost 1.8 per cent.
Share prices in the energy sector have surged in recent days as a result of rising oil and gas prices, amid fears there will not be enough supply to meet growing global demand.
Europe is grappling with surging gas prices as it heads into winter, while in the United Kingdom there have been major shortages of petrol and diesel, forcing some petrol stations to close.
After Tuesday’s fall in the sharemarket, most of the gains in the wider market made in the last week have been nearly wiped out.