SYDNEY, June 18, 2026, 03:03 AEST
- S&P/ASX 200 closed 0.5% higher at 8,966 Wednesday, a 20-day high.
- Technology stocks and materials were higher, while energy dropped after producers took a hit from declining oil prices.
- RBA kept rates on hold, which offered some relief, but its inflation warning left the outlook for the next move unclear.
Sydney stocks advanced Wednesday, the S&P/ASX 200 adding 0.5% to close at 8,966. Gains in tech and miners drove the move, putting the index at its highest close in 20 days, even as energy shares dropped after oil fell on hopes the Strait of Hormuz could reopen. By the end, 141 names were up and 55 down.
The cash market wasn’t open when this published; ASX’s normal trading is 09:59:45 to 16:00 in Sydney. So Wednesday’s close is the last full session before Thursday’s start, and that’s key as investors weigh sliding oil, a Reserve Bank of Australia that’s still hawkish, and the looming U.S. Fed decision.
RBA keeps cash rate steady at 4.35% Tuesday, holding its main policy tool in place. The board signaled inflation remains above target and said another rate hike is possible if needed, so any boost for rate-sensitive sectors was muted.
Technology stocks climbed 1.7%. Materials gained 1.1% and consumer discretionary put on 0.8%. Energy dragged, sector down 2.2%. Utilities and consumer staples also weaker. Among movers, Web Travel Group surged 11.1%. SiteMinder added 10.9%. Pantoro Gold up 8.2%. Karoon Energy dropped 12.5%. Woodside Energy off 3.5%. Beach Energy fell 3.2%.
Betashares investment strategist Tom Wickenden said Australia’s big resource sectors moved in opposite directions this week. Energy stocks dropped about 6%, but materials rose roughly 10% and hit record highs. “Commodity prices have firmed,” he said, crediting the global AI infrastructure buildout, defence, and the energy transition for boosting copper, aluminium and other Australian producers. ABC News
The Australian dollar edged down 0.2% to 70.54 U.S. cents late in the session. Markets in the region traded mixed. Japan’s Nikkei was up 0.7%. South Korea’s KOSPI rose 1.5%. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong dropped 0.4%. In the U.S., the Dow Jones finished 0.6% higher but the S&P 500 fell 0.8%.
RBA kept rates on hold, but markets still see rate risk. Stephen Smith at Deloitte Access Economics said the pause shows the central bank is dealing with a “cloudy outlook.” Harry Murphy Cruise from Oxford Economics Australia said pressures on underlying inflation “will not dissipate immediately.” Reuters
The Federal Reserve was in focus, with investors watching for its decision. Reuters said the central bank was set to leave U.S. rates at 3.50%-3.75% when it announces the move at 2 p.m. EDT. Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan, pointed to a “more neutral bias” from the Fed. That kind of language could move global stocks and the Australian dollar. Reuters
ASX Ltd is looking to cut the cap on share issuance for takeover funding to 25% of capital without a shareholder vote, down from the 100% allowed for S&P/ASX 300 companies. Gavin Skene, the acting group executive for listings at ASX, said the exchange got the message from investors about dilution. Allan Gray CIO Simon Mawhinney said smaller names outside the ASX 300 should get the same protection.
Risk is markets might be betting on too smooth a path. If talks to reopen the Strait of Hormuz collapse, oil could spike, putting inflation heat back on just as the RBA and Fed keep rates tight to fight prices. Consumer and tech names, already sensitive to higher rates, would take a hit, even if energy companies like Woodside and Santos manage to recover some of their declines from Wednesday.