Sydney, May 5, 2026, 03:07 AEST
Australian stocks start Tuesday under pressure, following a 0.4% drop in the S&P/ASX 200 to 8,697.10 on Monday. National Australia Bank and consumer staples weighed on the market as investors looked ahead to the Reserve Bank of Australia’s rate call. The benchmark shed 0.7% over the previous week.
Investors are contending with more than a rough patch in trading. Eyes turn to the RBA board’s cash-rate call at 2:30 p.m. AEST; the current rate sits at 4.1%, and a 25-basis-point bump to 4.35% is widely expected by economists at the big four banks. For reference, a basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point. The cash rate, in turn, feeds straight into mortgage and deposit rates.
The cash market had already shut by the dateline. According to ASX, pre-open kicks off at 07:00 in Sydney, with regular trading from 09:59:45 to 16:00. That leaves investors just one brief overnight stretch to react ahead of the central bank statement.
NAB kicked things off with first-half cash earnings of A$2.64 billion. That’s not only under the Visible Alpha consensus of A$2.93 billion, it’s also well off last year’s A$3.58 billion. Drag: a hefty A$949 million hit from software capitalisation, plus a further A$706 million put away for possible bad loans. “Very hard to forecast,” Chief Executive Andrew Irvine said of the backdrop. Reuters
Banks didn’t move as a block. NAB dropped 1.6%, Bank of Queensland shed 3.5%, while ANZ climbed 1.9%. Macquarie edged lower by 0.1% ahead of its result. The split underlined how investors navigated both individual bank earnings risks and the rate outlook, according to ABC.
Consumer staples took a hit. A2 Milk announced a recall of three U.S. infant formula batches after cereulide—a toxin linked to foodborne illness—was found during testing; 63,078 tins in total, with roughly 16,428 possibly already with consumers. Jeremy Sullivan at Hamilton Hindin Greene said the bigger issue might be “a wider perception problem,” not just the immediate financial hit. Reuters
Endeavour Group piled on. The Dan Murphy’s parent flagged a fresh A$6 million to A$8 million hit to second-half supply-chain costs tied to higher fuel and freight because of the Middle East conflict, despite efforts to shave A$100 million off expenses over three years. Shares dropped 3.8%, according to Reuters.
Accent Group slipped as well. The footwear retailer disclosed it got ASIC notices asking for help with an investigation involving trades in its securities from May 23 to June 10, 2025. No charges, no accusations against the company itself. Accent trimmed its second-half FY26 EBIT outlook to A$23 million to A$28 million, putting projected full-year EBIT in a range of A$79.5 million to A$84.5 million.
This wasn’t a blanket selloff. By 2:15 p.m., MarketIndex tallied only 82 ASX 200 stocks in positive territory, and just three sectors—technology, healthcare, and telecommunications—managed to stay above water. Fresh updates out of Endeavour, A2 Milk, Accent, and NAB dragged on certain pockets of the market.
The risk isn’t one-sided. If the RBA tilts hawkish and points to more rate hikes, equities could face another round of valuation markdowns. On the other hand, a pause might clear a path for some beaten-down consumer stocks to recover. IG’s Tony Sycamore thinks a hold gets more likely if the “acute phase of the inflation scare has peaked.” But Adam Boyton at ANZ flagged that pushing inflation back to target quickly could come “at a considerable cost” to jobs. Reuters
Tuesday’s focus is squarely on the RBA statement’s tone—traders aren’t just looking at the rate figure. Markets have little patience for earnings misses, calls on margins, or regulatory curveballs; NAB and Accent have already made that clear.