SYDNEY: Australian shares ended higher on Friday, supported by the materials and healthcare sector even as the market continued to be dogged by concerns over a new bank tax that dragged down financials.

The S&P/ASX 200 index crawled 0.2 percent higher, or 9.95 points, to finish the session at 5,715.90.

The benchmark lost 1 percent in the week due to a slump in commodity prices, concerns over the bank tax levy as well a profit downgrade by Australia’s No. 1 insurer by premium income, QBE Insurance Group’s, which spurred some selling in the banking sector.

A second Australian state on Friday said it was open to charging its own bank tax, raising fears the federal government has opened a “Pandora’s box” by slapping its own A$6.2 billion ($4.7 billion) levy on major lenders in its May budget.

This came a day after South Australia, the country’s fifth-largest state by population, infuriated the banking sector by announcing a A$370 mln ($279.72 mln) tax on the five big lenders.

Three of the “big four” banks ended marginally lower while Westpac Banking Corp was flat. Materials ended more than one percent higher after oil, gold and copper prices rose on Thursday.

Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton Ltd rose 1.2 percent while South32 Ltd jumped 2 percent.

The healthcare stocks finished the session 1.4 percent firmer. The index rose 2.1 percent for the week and recorded a fifth consecutive week of gains.—Reuters