On Tuesday, materials ended at their highest close since March 2, 2015, lifted by mining heavyweights as copper gained on expectations of strong demand from China and the United States. BHP Billiton Ltd rose 1.6 percent while its spin-off South32 Ltd jumped 4 percent. Fortescue Metals Group Ltd added 1.2 percent after Chinese steel prices edged up on expectations of lower output from China.
Financials gained 1.2 percent to end at their highest in nearly 17 months, with the "Big Four" banks leading the rally on the main index. Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, Australia's third-largest bank by market cap, rose 1.7 percent and was the biggest contributor to the benchmark's gains. The bank said it would sell its stake in Shanghai Rural Commercial Bank Co Ltd to China COSCO Shipping and Shanghai Sino-Poland Enterprise Management Development for A$1.8 billion ($1.3 billion). Energy stocks added 0.9 percent as oil prices rose on hopes Opec and non-Opec production cuts would ease the global supply glut. Gold miners shed 0.1 percent despite gains in gold prices in the face of a strong dollar.