Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Snaps Losing Run as CBA Bounces — But Rally Looks Thin

Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Snaps Losing Run as CBA Bounces — But Rally Looks Thin

May 14, 2026

Sydney, May 15, 2026, 03:02 AEST

Australian stocks managed a slight climb Thursday, the S&P/ASX 200 tacking on 10.3 points, or 0.12%, to close at 8,640.7. Banks bounced late, enough to counter declines in tech, staples and healthcare, ending a four-day losing streak. The mood, however, remained subdued.

This shift is hitting while local traders are still processing the housing-tax tweaks from the federal budget, along with Commonwealth Bank’s steep drop just a day before. Breadth was weak; decliners topped advancers, despite the benchmark eking out a gain by the close.

Financials picked up 1.0% as Commonwealth Bank of Australia climbed back 1.8%, following its steep 10.43% decline on Wednesday. Macquarie advanced 3.3%. ANZ and Westpac both finished higher. National Australia Bank, though, moved lower, so gains across the banks were patchy.

CBA shed almost A$30 billion in market cap Wednesday as the bank boosted provisions linked to Middle East conflict risks and the market digested fresh budget steps likely to dampen investor mortgage appetite. The lender reported a quarterly cash net profit of about A$2.7 billion. Collective provisions climbed by A$200 million.

Craig Sidney, senior investment adviser at Shaw and Partners, pointed out that some investors seem to be returning to bank stocks for their dividend yields, now that higher capital gains taxes are making growth stocks less appealing. The thinking: with the tax bite on future gains rising, steady income stacks up well.

Negative gearing—letting investors deduct property losses from taxable income—sits at the heart of the budget squeeze, alongside tweaks to capital gains tax. Morgan Stanley analysts, per Reuters, are penciling in a slowdown: they see Australian mortgage growth easing to 5.5% from 7.5% by 2027, and investor loan growth slipping to 7% from 10%.

CBA’s Matt Comyn flagged global trouble spots, noting, “Conflict in the Middle East is disrupting critical supply chains.” Loan impairment charges at the bank climbed to A$316 million, up from A$223 million a year ago. Reuters

Miners lent some strength to the index, though it was hardly straightforward. BHP managed another record close—three in a row now—while Rio Tinto set its own record finish. Fortescue picked up 2.1%. Even so, the materials sector slipped 0.1% as rare earths stocks tumbled: Lynas plunged 9.8%, Arafura shed 9.5%.

Information technology led the drop, down 2.2%, with Xero tumbling 9.0%. Consumer staples lost 1.9%—Coles slipped after a Federal Court found it had misled customers on “Down Down” discounts. Woolworths also slipped; it’s facing its own ACCC action. Market Index

Rates continue to move behind the scenes. On May 5, the Reserve Bank of Australia lifted the cash rate — that’s the main policy interest rate — by 25 basis points to 4.35%. (A basis point equals one one-hundredth of a percent.) Markets weren’t betting on a quick reversal: Polymarket implied an 80% chance the RBA would hold steady in June, while Kalshi’s contracts put June odds for an unchanged rate at 65% and a 1-to-25-basis-point hike at 22%.

Thursday’s rise may just be a short-lived rebound rather than a clear shift. The RBA flagged “materially heightened uncertainties” over both inflation and economic momentum, highlighting the threat of a protracted Middle East conflict driving up energy prices while dragging on growth. That scenario spells trouble for banks, consumers, and expensive equities. Reserve Bank of Australia

The ASX 200 managed to sidestep a fifth loss in a row, though support came mostly from a few major stocks rather than any surge in risk-on sentiment. Looking ahead to Friday, banks, rates, and China-linked resources remain the main drivers for the market.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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