Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls for Eighth Day as Woolworths Stock Sinks on Oil Shock

April 30, 2026
Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls for Eighth Day as Woolworths Stock Sinks on Oil Shock

Sydney, May 1, 2026, 03:08 AEST

Australian stocks slipped to their lowest finish in a month on Thursday, as the S&P/ASX 200 shed 21.20 points, or 0.24%, to close at 8,665.80—marking the index’s eighth consecutive drop and its weakest level since April 2. Losses in miners, coupled with Woolworths’ warning on fuel costs, more than offset strength from banks and energy shares. Investing.com Australia

The oil shock isn’t just a headline anymore—it’s starting to show up in Australian earnings and rate risk. Brent crude hit $126.41 a barrel, a level not seen since March 2022, before pulling back. Reuters noted supply disruptions continued, with the Strait of Hormuz still shut. Reuters

Rate conditions aren’t offering much relief right now. Australian consumer prices jumped 1.4% in the first quarter—the biggest quarterly move since late 2023. Annual inflation sped up to 4.1%. The trimmed mean, which excludes volatile outliers, hit 3.5%, keeping it outside the Reserve Bank of Australia’s preferred 2% to 3% band. “Points to a rate hike” next week, Deloitte Access Economics partner Stephen Smith said, though he cautioned it’s not a lock yet. Reuters

Woolworths clearly took the heaviest blow. Shares tumbled as much as 9.8% in early trade after the grocer flagged that fiscal 2026 Australian Food earnings growth wouldn’t hit the upper end of guidance, citing pressure from fuel costs and heavier spending to keep shoppers loyal. The company is also set to freeze prices on 300 staple items starting May 1. Reuters

Woolworths posted third-quarter group sales of A$18.1 billion in its ASX release, a 4.5% rise on the year. Chief Executive Amanda Bardwell flagged “early signs” that the Middle East conflict was having an impact on both customers and staff—many still feeling the squeeze from cost-of-living pressures.

Not everything was down across the board. According to ASX’s daily market wrap, trading volumes came in above the usual mark, with 103 stocks finishing higher—so the slide in the index owed more to losses among the heavyweights than to any sweeping sell-off. Australian Securities Exchange

Still, those losses across major sectors took a toll. Miners slumped 2.7%. Consumer staples sank 5%. Financials managed a 1% rise, and energy advanced 1.4%. Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, said the ASX 200 could “remain range-bound or test lower supports” if energy fails to provide support. The Business Times

BHP, Rio Tinto, and Fortescue all traded lower, dropping anywhere from 1.4% to 1.6%. On the other hand, oil names Woodside and Santos climbed, up by as much as 3% and 1.9%. Gains in the big four banks, ranging from 0.3% to 1.1%, helped cushion the index. Business Recorder

ASX Ltd jumped after tapping company veteran Darren Yip as interim CEO, starting May 29. The shares climbed up to 3.9% to hit A$60.08, a level not seen since September 2025, according to Reuters. Reuters

The risk doesn’t just run one direction. If inflation data shows more softness, the RBA could find cover to hold fire, with ABC noting that market odds for a hike to 4.35% have slipped to roughly 75%. A sharp drop in oil prices would bolster that argument. But if fuel costs stay stubborn and the central bank pushes rates higher, consumers and company margins both get hit. Abc

Stock Market Today

  • Diploma (LSE:DPLM) Raises Fair Value Target on Updated 2026 Revenue Guidance
    May 19, 2026, 8:54 PM EDT. Diploma PLC (LSE:DPLM) has updated its fiscal 2026 earnings guidance, forecasting 9% organic revenue growth, weighted towards the first half of the year. This raised outlook has prompted several major banks, including JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Deutsche Bank, Berenberg, and RBC Capital, to revise their price targets upward. The company's fair value price target now stands at £71.15, up from £67.46, reflecting increased optimism about its growth prospects. BNP Paribas has also initiated coverage with a bullish stance. Despite the positive revisions, some analysts caution that tighter consensus targets may leave less margin for error if the company underperforms. Investors are advised to consider diverse views to gauge Diploma's valuation and risks going forward.