May 12 (Reuters) - Australian shares inched lower on Wednesday, with most losses in energy stocks and major banks, tracking an overnight Wall Street sell-off as worries about rising inflation in the United States weighed on risk sentiment.
The S&P/ASX 200 (xjo) slipped 0.09% to 7,090.9 by 0025 GMT.
Wall Street closed lower as rising commodity prices and labour shortages fed fears that despite reassurances from the U.S. Federal Reserve, near-term price spikes could translate into longer-term inflation.
Australian energy stocks .AXEJ skidded 0.74,% even as oil prices rose amid lingering fears of gasoline shortages after a cyber attack on the U.S. fuel pipeline system.
Sector heavyweight Whitehaven Coal (WHC) fell 2.87%, followed by Origin Energy Ltd (ORG) , losing 1.48%.
Financial stocks .AXFJ tumbled 0.54%, with all the 'Big Four' banks in the red, even as the country's biggest lender Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) almost doubled its third-quarter cash profit.
Suncorp Group (SUN) and Omni Bridgeway Ltd (OBL) led losses, slipping 4.37% and 2.82%, respectively.
Building materials firm CSR Ltd (CSR) jumped as much as 6.3% to a more than 13-year high after posting a higher full-year profit.
Across the Tasman Sea, New Zealand's benchmark S&P/NZX 50 (nz50) fell 0.2% to 12,613.9.
In other markets, Japan's Nikkei .N225 was up 0.36% at 28,711.59, and the S&P 500 E-minis futures EScv1 were up 0.07%.
News: XEJ Australia shares slip as U.S. inflation fears weigh; energy, banking stocks fall most
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