The S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.7 per cent to 7,017.80, its worst session since March 30. All sub-indexes ended in negative territory.
All three major Wall Street indexes ended lower on Monday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq slipping nearly 1 per cent.
“The benchmark is lower tracking Nasdaq which is down quite a bit with the tech-heavy stocks. We are certainly more affected by financials, miners and tech sectors on the local index,” said Dale Raynes, associate director at CPS Capital.
Tech stocks fell 1.2 per cent, dragged by Altium Ltd which was down the most at 5.2 per cent.
Sector heavyweight Afterpay lost 0.8 per cent. The buy-now-pay-later giant said it was exploring a U.S. listing after North America became its biggest market.
Financial stocks gave up 0.9 per cent. Challenger plummeted 15.8 per cent, its worst day since March 2020, as it forecast annual profit at the bottom end of its guidance range.
Miners eased 0.2 per cent, with Lynas slumping 8.5 per cent after its third-quarter revenue and sales volume of rare earth oxides fell from the prior quarter, partly due to the Suez Canal blockage in March.
Raynes said losses in Lynas and Challenger were having a particularly pronounced affect on the market due to a lack of other catalysts.
New Zealand’s benchmark S&P/NZX 50 fell 0.7 per cent to 12678.55. Port and harbour operator Napier Port declined the most, falling 4.2 per cent. ($1 = 1.2832 Australian dollars)