Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls 1.1% as Iran War Fears Hit Shares Before Easter Break

April 2, 2026
Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls 1.1% as Iran War Fears Hit Shares Before Easter Break

SYDNEY, April 3, 2026, 04:13 GMT+11

Australian stocks slipped on Thursday, erasing earlier gains as the S&P/ASX 200 dropped 1.1% to 8,579.5, marking the steepest one-day slide since March 19. Pressure mounted on miners: Rio Tinto slid 3.3%, while BHP ended 2.5% lower. Fresh comments from U.S. President Donald Trump—signaling additional strikes on Iran and offering no end date for the conflict—rattled sentiment. Hebe Chen, a market analyst at Vantage Markets, called it a blow to “fragile hope for a near-term de-escalation.” Indo Premier

Timing made the difference. With Thursday marking the last full ASX session before Good Friday and Easter Monday put markets on hold, sellers erased a good chunk of Wednesday’s 2.2% jump—momentum that had briefly sent the benchmark to its best close since March 11 thanks to bets on easing conflict. Indo Premier

The move reversed as markets sank following Trump’s televised speech, where he projected the war would drag on another two to three weeks and left the outlook for the vital Strait of Hormuz murky. Brent crude rebounded, nearing $109 a barrel. Japan’s Nikkei dropped 2.4%, while South Korea’s Kospi shed 4.7%. “When is this going to be over?” asked Russel Chesler, VanEck Australia’s head of investments and capital markets—a question he said is at the heart of the current volatility. Reuters

The Aussie dollar slipped 0.6% to $0.6882, with traders dialing back hopes for any swift resolution to the energy shock. That spells trouble for local stocks, as the risk of imported inflation climbs and oil prices head higher. Business Recorder

Canberra’s already scrambling to soften the impact. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pledged as much as A$1 billion in interest-free loans for critical businesses. Ministers are weighing a gas security plan that would require exporters to direct supplies to the domestic market ahead of winter. Officials have flagged the ongoing war as a factor upending fuel and gas markets in a nation that relies heavily on imports. Reuters

Equities are staring down a bigger threat: pricier energy could push inflation back up. Citi’s chief Australian economist, Josh Williamson, flagged that the bank trimmed its 2026 growth forecast to 2.0% from 2.6% and now sees consumer inflation peaking at 5.5%. He cited mounting “stagflation risks”—think sluggish growth paired with hotter prices. This week’s Reserve Bank of Australia minutes revealed officials believe oil around $100 a barrel could drive headline inflation near 5% for the June quarter. Business Recorder

ASX Ltd slipped 0.3% on Thursday, with ASIC’s final report casting a shadow. The regulator said the exchange operator prioritized shareholder returns at the expense of shoring up essential market infrastructure, injecting another layer of governance worry into an already fragile session. Reuters

The benchmark closed the holiday-shortened week up 0.7%. With the ASX dark on Friday and again on Monday, and Albanese cautioning that the economic fallout from the war will linger for months, investors are left exposed—two days of headlines and oil swings before trading picks up again on Tuesday. Indo Premier

Stock Market Today

  • NS&I to Contact Victims of £367 Million Lost Funds Scandal
    May 19, 2026, 3:32 PM EDT. National Savings and Investments (NS&I) will soon reach out to victims of a lost funds scandal affecting the estates of 34,000 deceased customers, involving £367 million in unpaid bereavement claims. NS&I, a government-backed savings provider with 24 million customers, admitted errors in identifying all products held by deceased clients, delaying access to their funds. The bank announced it will contact holders of estates with balances over £10 to recover the full value, including interest or Bank of England base rate plus 1%, whichever is higher. Payouts are expected to begin soon and complete by mid-2027. The funds will be exempt from inheritance and income tax, with affected families able to claim legal costs. NS&I has introduced stronger bereavement claim processes following the scandal, which led to the resignation of its former CEO.