SYDNEY, June 19, 2026, 03:09 AEST
- Westpac ended Thursday’s trading at A$35.16, slipping 1.12%.
- S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.62% to 8,911.1. Financials slipped 0.48%.
- ASX cash trading was closed at the dateline. Regular trading is set for Friday, with sessions kicking off about 10:00 AEST.
Westpac Banking Corp finished Thursday in the red, pressured as traders pulled back from rate-sensitive banks following a more hawkish global view on rates. Commonwealth Bank dropped 0.90%, National Australia Bank slipped 0.88%. ANZ managed to buck the trend, edging up 0.26%.
Higher rates don’t guarantee bank valuations will rise. “A higher-for-longer rate environment can help protect net interest margins, but it also risks softening credit demand and putting more pressure on borrowers,” Vantage senior market analyst Hebe Chen told AAP. Net interest margin is the spread between interest earned on loans and funding costs. Morningstar
The drop on Thursday looked to be driven by sectors instead of any new Westpac news. The ASX’s page for the bank had the most recent update as the June 10 consumer release. There was no new filing that day to account for the selling in the session.
Rates are still the core debate for the stock. Westpac Chief Economist Luci Ellis said the Reserve Bank of Australia “went further than usual” in stressing this week that more rate hikes could come after the central bank kept the cash rate at 4.35%. Westpac
The warning comes as Australia’s economy keeps losing steam. GDP rose just 0.3% in the March quarter and jobless numbers hit a 4½-year high at 4.5%. Core inflation is still above the Reserve Bank’s 2%-3% range. Another hike could boost some bank asset returns, but households would feel the hit with tighter budgets and more risk on repayments.
Westpac heads into this stretch already tight on leeway. The bank reported a first-half net profit of A$3.41 billion, under the A$3.47 billion Visible Alpha consensus. Credit impairment charges climbed to A$443 million from A$250 million, and net interest margin dropped to 1.89% from 1.92%. Still, stressed loans and overdue mortgages saw some improvement.
Westpac shares have slid hard. The stock ended Thursday down about 16.5% from its all-time high of A$42.13 in February, when quarterly profit got a bump from better loan and deposit growth. The drop points to investors moving quickly—switching from focusing on growth to looking hard at how solid earnings and credit quality really are.
Operational risk is back in focus. RBA Assistant Governor Brad Jones told banks this week to get ready for a “more shock-prone” system, naming geopolitical shocks, cyberattacks and hardening sanctions rules as key threats. That means big banks are facing rising technology, compliance and capital costs. ABC News
The outlook isn’t clear-cut. Bulls point to Westpac keeping up loan growth and deposits—lending climbed 4% in the first half, deposits up 3%—while holding the line on funding costs. But there’s a risk: if inflation pushes rates higher, customers could come under pressure faster than margin gains show up, and Westpac may have to build provisions. Those are already sitting at the highest level since COVID.
Wall Street is shut for Juneteenth, so Australia goes into Friday’s session with less direction from the U.S. Locals will watch bond yields, what traders expect from the RBA, and moves in the bank sector to set the tone for Westpac.