SYDNEY, June 8, 2026, 00:05 (AEST)
- ANZ shares ended Friday at A$34.12, off 1.04% on the day, down 3.07% in the past week.
- ASX cash trading won’t open Monday, with the market shut for the King’s Birthday holiday.
- ANZ dropped some fixed home-loan rates on June 5, going the other way after Westpac and NAB lifted theirs recently.
ANZ Group Holdings shares ended Friday at A$34.12, down 3.07% for the week. The bank made a mortgage pricing move late in the week, raising new questions about margins for investors going into the holiday-shortened stretch.
Timing is a factor. Australia’s main stock market is closed Monday for the King’s Birthday public holiday. That puts the next move for bank shares off until Tuesday, after they ended last week on the back foot.
S&P/ASX 200 closed down 61 points, or 0.70%, at 8,625.10 on Friday as banks weighed on the market. ANZ didn’t get much of a lift from the broader market heading into the long weekend.
ANZ lowered its two-year fixed home-loan rate to 6.29% from 6.39% on Friday, with the three-year fixed rate dropping to 6.49% from 6.54%, according to Canstar. Fixed home-loan rates stay locked for a period, while variable rates change if market rates or bank funding costs shift.
Macquarie lowered fixed rates in a move that stood out, with Westpac and NAB having lifted some fixed rates recently, according to Canstar. “Just how uncertain the outlook remains,” said Sally Tindall, Canstar’s data insights director. Canstar
Australia’s cash rate from the Reserve Bank sits at 4.35%. The next decision comes June 16. April’s annual inflation print was 4.2%, keeping funding for banks and mortgage rates in focus.
RBA Governor Michele Bullock warned lawmakers last week that the “outlook is highly uncertain,” citing higher rates, rising energy prices and slower growth. That leaves banks facing a double edge—while lending income can get a lift from higher rates, credit growth may take a hit and bad-debt risks could rise. Reserve Bank of Australia
ANZ is still working on execution. Chief Executive Nuno Matos told investors last month the bank was “on track to complete the migration by June 2027” of Suncorp Bank customers onto ANZ systems. By the end of March, 34% of the migration was done. ANZ
The lender reported a 9% drop in costs from the prior half, stripping out significant items, and said 78% of planned staff exits were complete by end-April. Investors are watching to see if these expense cuts are enough to counter slower mortgage growth or tougher loan margins.
Analysts have kept an eye on the balance for months. Back in February, Jefferies analyst Andrew Lyons called the “real test” ANZ’s ability to manage its net interest margin as it went back to system housing growth. Net interest margin is what a bank makes on loans minus what it pays for deposits and wholesale funding. Reuters
But the risks are straight ahead. If funding costs don’t fall, banks may cut fixed rates to chase loans, but that squeezes their margins. If the RBA hikes again, or the economy slows more than expected, credit growth could stall. Trouble with Suncorp integration would pile on more pressure.
Lite lineup for ANZ-specific events this week. The RBA drops its financial-stability bulletin on Tuesday before deciding rates on June 16. ANZ’s 83-cent interim dividend gets paid July 1.