Westpac share price ends higher at A$40.61 as bank rally cools — what to watch next

Westpac share price ends higher at A$40.61 as bank rally cools — what to watch next

February 16, 2026

Sydney, Feb 16, 2026, 17:09 AEDT — Market closed.

  • Westpac ended the day 0.2% higher at A$40.61, sticking close to its recent peak.
  • Focus is moving away from bank earnings, with investors now zeroing in on rates, spending data, and margin pressure.
  • Eyes turn to the RBA minutes and this week’s labour figures, before Westpac’s interim numbers land on May 5.

Westpac Banking Corp ended Monday at A$40.61, up 0.2%, having moved between A$40.05 and A$40.77 during the session. Shares still sit under the 52-week high of A$42.13.

Even a minor shift is making waves. This month, Westpac stands out among “macro” trades on the Australian board. Investors have been trying to pinpoint how rates, credit growth, and bad debts will shake out after banks posted robust earnings.

Now that the cash-rate debate has resurfaced, traders are scanning for any signals on consumer strength. Those numbers flow directly into loan growth, arrears, and, in the end, what happens to dividends.

Australian shares ended the session with solid gains. The S&P/ASX 200 picked up 0.22% by the close, lifted by advances in IT, consumer discretionary, and industrial names.

Banks gave back some ground early on following last week’s rally. Financials dropped 0.5%. ANZ slipped 2.5%, while National Australia Bank was down 1% by late morning, according to Reuters.

Opinions on Westpac are still divided. Following the bank’s quarterly release last week, Morgan Stanley stuck with its “underweight” recommendation, even as it bumped up the target price—telling MarketIndex the recent profit beat was already baked into the stock, and cautioning that valuation looked stretched. JPMorgan is staying neutral. The firm flagged the shares as fully valued. Market Index

Westpac shares surged to an all-time high last week after the bank topped first-quarter profit forecasts, boosted by strength in both loans and deposits. Net interest margin, though, edged down 3 basis points to 1.79%. CEO Anthony Miller struck an upbeat tone, saying, “We are optimistic on the outlook for the economy and expect demand for both business and household credit to remain resilient.” Citi analysts described the quarter as “solid.” Reuters

Westpac’s research team is seeing a shift in spending patterns. The Westpac-DataX Card Tracker Index has slowed from the brisk clip seen after the holidays, and the bank now expects the latest rate increase to cool things off further—even with the jobs market still holding up.

For Westpac bulls, there’s a risk that “resilient” just means “fine until it isn’t.” Should deposit competition remain fierce and households tighten up faster than the market’s betting, margins might compress and credit costs could ramp up fast—even if they’re coming off a low base.

This week, eyes in Australia shift to the Reserve Bank of Australia minutes, with Westpac’s economics team also pointing to labour market numbers, the wage price index, and the Westpac-MI Leading Index as ones to watch.

Westpac wraps up its half-year on March 31. Interim results and a dividend update are expected May 5 — that’s the next key date for investors sizing up whether the bank’s recent earnings momentum is sustainable.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • Australia Set to Gain LNG Share as Hormuz Disruption Hits Oil, Repairs Slow Qatar Exports
    July 10, 2026, 12:34 AM EDT. Australia is poised to become the world's number two LNG exporter after attacks forced Qatar's Ras Laffan to start repairs. The Strait of Hormuz is now facing what the International Energy Agency calls the largest oil supply disruption ever, holding up around 34% of global crude flows. LNG supply is tight because it's harder to reroute. As Asian and European demand kicks up, Australia stands out on location and reliability. Japan called Australian gas a lifeline for the region, and the LNG boom could drive more money into export infrastructure. Still, Australia's domestic market likely won't get relief from higher global prices.