Australian shares ended higher on Wednesday, March 11 with the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 gaining 50.90 points, or 0.59 per cent, to close at 8,743.50. The rise was supported by strong gains in mining and materials stocks, even as several sectors, including utilities and technology, finished the day in the red.

Despite the day’s positive close, the index remains down about 1.77 per cent over the past five sessions and is largely flat on a year-to-date basis, reflecting mixed investor sentiment in recent trading.

Top gainers and losers
Mining stocks dominated the gainers’ list, led by Ora Banda Mining Ltd, which surged 21.46 per cent to close at $1.415. Rare earths producer Lynas Rare Earths Limited followed with a sharp 16.20 per cent rise to $20.59.

Other strong performers included Iluka Resources Limited, which climbed 9.36 per cent, Champion Iron Limited, up 6.93 per cent, and IperionX Limited, which gained 5.15 per cent.

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On the downside, property investment group Centuria Capital Group was the worst performer, dropping 5.73 per cent to $1.645. Energy provider AGL Energy Limited fell 5.55 per cent, while GQG Partners Inc. declined 5.50 per cent.
Technology company Life360 Inc. slipped 4.84 per cent and sports analytics firm Catapult Sports Ltd lost 4.62 per cent.
Sector-wise performance
Sector performance was mixed during the session. The materials sector led gains with a rise of nearly 2 per cent, supported by strong moves in mining stocks. Financials also advanced, climbing about 0.85 per cent, while energy and consumer staples posted modest gains.

However, several sectors ended lower. Utilities recorded the sharpest decline, followed by information technology and healthcare. Telecommunications services, A-REITs, consumer discretionary and industrials also finished slightly in negative territory, highlighting a broadly uneven market performance despite the overall index gain.