Wesfarmers trades up with ASX as shares stay close to highs

Wesfarmers trades up with ASX as shares stay close to highs

June 17, 2026

Sydney, June 18, 2026, 03:05 (AEST)

  • Wesfarmers traded at A$85.49 late in the session, adding 0.27%. The S&P/ASX 200 ended Wednesday up 0.5% at 8,966.30. Wesfarmers
  • Shares are still stuck after last week’s strategy update, with the June plan to move Blackwoods and Workwear Group into Bunnings set for July 1. Wesfarmers
  • Wesfarmers is set to report full-year results on Aug. 27. Household cost pressures and uncertain rates are still the biggest risks, according to the company. Wesfarmers

Wesfarmers Limited closed up 0.27% at A$85.49 at 4:11 p.m. Sydney time as buyers stayed with big consumer stocks during the rally on the Australian sharemarket. The Bunnings and Kmart owner trades near its recent highs and now has a market value of around A$97 billion, which is the total market value of its listed shares. Google

ASX cash trading was shut at the dateline. Regular hours for Australian shares start at 09:59:45 and end at 16:00 Sydney time, before the closing auction and post-close trade. Australian Securities Exchange

The timing stands out since the S&P/ASX 200 posted gains on Wednesday, stretching its rally to a fourth session and closing at a peak not seen since April 15. Miners and lenders led the way, with sentiment lifting after tensions eased around the Strait of Hormuz. “The recent rally still has life,” said Hebe Chen, market analyst at Vantage Markets, pointing to “easing geopolitical risk, lower oil prices and renewed momentum in risk appetite.” The Business Times

Wesfarmers shares are moving on updates from earlier this month. The last big item on the company’s ASX page is the June 10 strategy briefing, with no major announcements posted since. Filings from early June are the most recent disclosures. Traders are relying on those and tracking Australian household demand. Wesfarmers

Wesfarmers is moving Blackwoods and Workwear Group into its Bunnings Group, with the Industrial and Safety businesses set to shift on July 1. Their earnings will be reported as part of Bunnings’ numbers for the first half of fiscal 2027. Chief Financial Officer Anthony Gianotti said the realignment is aimed at “unlock[ing] growth in the small and medium sized customer segments.”

Bunnings gives Wesfarmers big household and commercial reach. Bringing in Blackwoods’ product line and fulfilment system adds a business-facing lever for management. Bunnings will keep reporting key sales figures with the shifted businesses excluded, so investors can watch the core still.

Wesfarmers is coming off its February half-year numbers, with the market looking at those as the base. The company posted A$24.21 billion in revenue and A$1.60 billion net profit after tax, up 9.3%. EBIT rose 8.4% to A$2.49 billion. Wesfarmers also upped its fully franked interim dividend to A$1.02 a share, passing on Australian tax credits. Managing Director Rob Scott said profit got a boost from “strong earnings contributions” at Bunnings, Kmart Group and WesCEF.

Retail names went different ways today. Google’s related-stocks board had Coles off 1.32% and Woolworths down 1.25%, with Wesfarmers up. That gap puts attention back on Wesfarmers’ tilt toward value and non-food retail, as opposed to the sector as a whole. Google

But risks remain. Wesfarmers kept a cautious tone in its half-year outlook, saying cost-of-living pressures aren’t hitting all households the same and that inflation and interest-rate uncertainty are affecting consumer sentiment and business confidence. If these pressures get worse or operating costs stay high, Bunnings, Kmart and Officeworks could find it harder to turn higher sales into better margins.

Wesfarmers will be on watch ahead of its full-year results set for Aug. 27. The shares could stay tied to the pace of the ASX rally, what the market decides about Bunnings integration, and if customers stick with cheaper options as household budgets remain stretched. Wesfarmers

Stock Market Today

  • Coles shares dip as ASX 200 gains amid cost and pricing pressures
    June 17, 2026, 4:56 PM EDT. Coles Group shares fell 1.3% to A$23.12, underperforming the ASX 200 which rose 0.54% to 8,966.30 on June 17, 2026. Investors weighed Coles' 4.0% quarterly supermarket sales growth against challenges from liquor revenue decline, rising supplier costs, and increased pricing scrutiny. The Reserve Bank of Australia maintained its cash rate at 4.35%, signaling persistent inflation concerns. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission found Coles guilty of misleading pricing tactics, signaling tighter regulatory oversight with new rules effective July 1, 2026, targeting major supermarkets earning above A$30 billion annually. Rival Woolworths also slid, reflecting sector-wide margin pressures. CEO Leah Weckert emphasized the importance of "value and availability" amid cost headwinds from fuel, freight, and packaging increases. The supermarket sector faces intensifying cost and regulatory challenges despite steady consumer demand.