SYDNEY, June 8, 2026, 03:11 (AEST)
- ASX cash trading will be closed Monday for the King’s Birthday. QBE next trades locally on Tuesday.
- QBE closed Friday at A$22.67, rising 1.21% for the session and ending the week up roughly 0.13%.
- Investors go into the shortened week watching catastrophe claims, premium prices and the mood across the financial sector.
QBE Insurance Group shares barely moved over the holiday-shortened week. The stock got a small boost Friday, steadying as the broader Australian market traded lower.
The Australian Securities Exchange is shut Monday for the King’s Birthday holiday. There is no settlement and the day won’t be logged as a business day on the ASX calendar. Regular cash-market trading will start up again Tuesday, following the normal Sydney hours from just before 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
QBE hasn’t put out much new lately, so the shares are mostly moving on shifts in global risk, bond yields, or news about insurance claims. The stock ended Friday at A$22.67, up 1.21% for the day and just 0.13% higher than last Friday’s close at A$22.64.
ASX 200 slips as banks, miners drag. The S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.70% on Friday, finishing at 8,625.10. Banks and miners were the weak spots on the benchmark.
QBE’s move higher Friday came as other local insurers also traded stronger. Insurance Australia Group was up 0.27% and Suncorp picked up 1.04%. Insurers saw some defensive buying even with the broader market weaker.
QBE’s focus remains on executing its strategy, not chasing any one headline. In May, QBE reported first-quarter gross written premium up 11%, or 7% adjusting for currency. The insurer stuck with its 2026 goals: mid-single-digit premium growth and a combined operating ratio around 92.5%. That ratio measures claims and expenses against premiums, with anything under 100% signaling underwriting profit.
Claims still drive the story. QBE said net catastrophe claims ran to around $300 million over the four months to April, with the first-half allowance standing at $517 million. The company also said direct underwriting impacts from Middle East events so far are not material—estimated at about $60 million—already counted in catastrophe costs.
Citi’s Nigel Pittaway said last month the first-half catastrophe allowance looks “more than sufficient barring a particularly adverse two months.” He added the Middle East loss came in a bit higher than he expected. Tiger Brokers
Investment income gave QBE another lift. The company reported about $500 million in investment income for the four months to April. That was helped by a core fixed-income yield of 4.1%, up from 3.7% in 2025. Insurers like QBE invest premiums before paying claims, so fixed income plays a key role.
QBE’s runway could tighten if natural catastrophe losses jump in May and June, or if geopolitical disputes flare up again. More price pressure in commercial property and Lloyd’s would add to that. The insurer already flagged that competition is strongest in those areas, though said its overall pricing environment remains supportive.
QBE won’t trade until Tuesday after the Monday holiday. Traders will start to reprice the stock then. Up next for the company is its first-half earnings set for Aug. 14. That’s when shareholders will find out how its claims allowance, premium growth, and investment income performed for the rest of the half.