SYDNEY/WELLINGTON: Australian shares ended slightly lower on Monday, as growing coronavirus cases in the country's most populous state stoke fears of tighter movement restrictions, though gains in heavyweight miners limited losses. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.1% to close at 6,669.90, after closing 1.2% lower on Friday.

Energy stocks suffered a 1.1% drop as oil prices weakened amid concerns over the new COVID-19 strain in the UK. Woodside Petroleum fell 2.8%, while Origin Energy gave up 1.6%. AGL Energy closed 5.1% lower, after the country's top power producer slashed its full-year outlook following a transformer incident that led to an outage at its coal-fired Liddell power plant.

Software firm WiseTech Global fell 6.5% to be the biggest loser among tech stocks on reports of a short-seller attack. Miners, however, climbed 1.6% to hit their highest since April 2011, buoyed by a jump in iron ore prices, with Fortescue Metals Group and BHP Group climbing 5% and 1.2%, respectively.

New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 index fell 0.6% to close at 12,607.74. A growing number of infections in Sydney's northern beachside suburbs has prompted other states and territories to seal off borders with the New South Wales' capital city, stoking fears that fresh curbs would slow down an economic rebound.

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