Wesfarmers Limited Shares Get a Budget Lift — Why the Bunnings Owner Still Faces a Rates Test

Wesfarmers Limited Shares Get a Budget Lift — Why the Bunnings Owner Still Faces a Rates Test

May 13, 2026

PERTH, May 14, 2026, 04:07 AWST

Wesfarmers Limited managed a gain on Wednesday, finishing at A$71.55, up 0.35%, even as the S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.47%. The stock, which dipped to A$70.80 earlier in the session, attracted buyers looking for consumer-discretionary exposure after recent losses. The group owns both Bunnings and Kmart.

Why it counts: Wesfarmers is exposed to both household spending and housing-driven demand—two big hot spots in Australia’s economy right now. On Wednesday, consumer discretionary shares climbed 2.94%, buoyed by housing-focused budget measures and a lift from peers like JB Hi-Fi and Breville.

Wesfarmers’ reach goes far beyond retail. The company’s operations cut across home improvement, general merchandise, office supplies, health, chemicals, fertilisers, lithium, plus an array of industrial products—offering a wide-angle lens on both consumer sentiment and business expenses in Australia.

Wages added another angle to the day: The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported its Wage Price Index climbed 0.8% over the March quarter, with annual growth at 3.3%. “Quarterly wage growth has remained at 0.8% since September 2025,” said Sue-Ellen Luke, who heads prices statistics at the ABS. Australian Bureau of Statistics

Rates are still the sticking point. On May 5, the Reserve Bank of Australia hiked its cash rate by 25 basis points to 4.35%, citing lingering inflation concerns after fuel and commodity prices pushed higher.

Prediction markets aren’t signaling much of a shift—just a hold. Kalshi’s June RBA contract gave a 65% chance rates stay put. On Polymarket, “No Change” landed at 80%, with “Increase” at 21% for June. The information is interesting, though these markets remain tiny versus conventional rates markets. Kalshi

Wesfarmers’ latest results offer investors a more straightforward picture. For the half, revenue landed at A$24.21 billion, with net profit after tax coming in at A$1.60 billion—a 9.3% increase. “Strong earnings contributions” from Bunnings, Kmart Group, and WesCEF underpinned the profit, according to Managing Director Rob Scott.

Bunnings is still driving most of the growth. Wesfarmers reported a 4.2% lift in Bunnings revenue for the half. Sales picked up across all product types, regions, and among both consumer and commercial clients—even though residential building activity hasn’t really picked up.

Wesfarmers leans on Kmart’s low-price model. The company pointed to cost discipline and its Anko products as key drivers for Kmart Group’s earnings. Target, though, struggled with weaker apparel sales. Higher costs, Scott noted, remain a burden for households and businesses alike.

Still, the setup looks fragile. Climbing rates threaten discretionary outlays, and tweaks to negative gearing — where rental losses offset taxable income — could dent parts of housing-driven demand. Wesfarmers’ chemicals and lithium arms? Those remain tied to commodity prices, currency moves, and how well projects are run. Covalent Lithium’s refinery ramp-up, the company notes, has dragged on; recurring odour problems have slowed progress.

Commonwealth Bank economists have a pause penciled in as their main scenario, though it’s hardly locked in. “A further rate hike cannot be ruled out,” warned Belinda Allen, CBA’s head of Australian economics, citing upcoming readings on budgets, wages, consumer spending and inflation as crucial signals. CommBank

Wesfarmers shares rode Wednesday’s rebound in the sector, but for investors, the calculus is tight. Its flagship retail banners retain both scale and pricing muscle. What matters now isn’t Wednesday’s pop—it’s whether Australian consumers keep opening their wallets as high rates persist.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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