ASX 200 Drops 0.6% as Miners, Banks Weigh on Australia Stocks

ASX 200 Drops 0.6% as Miners, Banks Weigh on Australia Stocks

June 18, 2026

Sydney, June 19, 2026, 03:09 (AEST)

  • The S&P/ASX 200 dropped 55.2 points, or 0.62%, to close at 8,911.1 on Thursday. That’s the index’s latest finished session.
  • Miners gave up 1.4%, tech stocks also down 1.4%, energy off 1.2% and financials slipped 0.5%. BHP dropped 0.8%. National Australia Bank lost 0.9%.
  • The Federal Reserve left its policy rate unchanged at 3.50%-3.75%. The Reserve Bank of Australia also kept its benchmark rate steady at 4.35%.

ASX stocks ended their four-day run lower on Thursday. Fresh anxiety over U.S. rates hit miners, banks and tech names. The local cash market was shut at press time, set to reopen Friday.

Stocks slipped after a four-day rally pushed the benchmark to a two-month high. Materials, property and financial shares, which had climbed in that stretch, lost ground as traders looked again at borrowing costs and global demand.

The Federal Reserve’s move is being called hawkish, which usually signals higher rates or less chance of cuts. Almost half of Fed officials see a hike in 2026, sending the U.S. dollar to a one-year high. Bond yields rose too, often making them more attractive than stocks.

Fed hike expectations by October are fully priced in, IG’s Tony Sycamore said. BHP and Rio Tinto lost ground, with gold, copper and lithium stocks also lower. The stronger dollar and weaker commodity prices hit the Australian resource index.

Major miners stayed under pressure, with BHP, Rio and Fortescue all down on the day. Vantage senior market analyst Hebe Chen said the sector was still stuck between “longer-term demand themes and near-term macro pressure.” Financials also slipped. Consumer staples, healthcare and industrial stocks held up better. Global X strategist Marc Jocum said the market action was “more like healthy consolidation than panic selling.” Morningstar

RBA left its cash rate steady at 4.35% this week, sticking with restrictive policy as inflation stays above target. That move offered little help to markets. The Australian dollar was at 70.31 U.S. cents in the RBA’s June 18 fix, slipping from 70.59 cents the previous day.

Australian stocks gave back gains after Wednesday’s two-month high, as traders took profits in recent winners but didn’t dump the market. A move higher from here may need softening global yields, a calmer U.S. dollar, and more help from commodities.

But there are risks on both sides. UBS strategist Richard Schellbach said inflation and oil price risks could return. The bank still has the ASX 200 reaching around 8,800 by the end of 2026. A tougher Fed or more trouble with the U.S.-Iran ceasefire might bring back inflation worries, hurting banks, miners and consumer stocks. If the ceasefire sticks and energy costs drop, bulls have more reason to expect a rally.

Konrad Wysocki

Konrad Wysocki is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Rzeszów, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

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