ASX 200 Drops Again, Tech Slide Puts Focus on CPI

Australian Shares Diverge From Commodities as Miner Stocks Fall

June 27, 2026

Sydney, June 27, 2026, 10:45 AEST

Key points

  • ASX 200 closed down for the holiday-shortened week, with miners giving up earlier gains.
  • Banks and domestic sectors absorbed some of the losses as iron ore and metals weakened.
  • Markets are split on what the Reserve Bank will do next after softer inflation but stronger jobs data.
  • Investors are watching for China PMI numbers, comments from the RBA, and the early days of earnings guidance season.

Australian shares closed out a choppy week with miners dragging down the main index, even as buyers moved into local companies, healthcare stocks, and some tech names.

S&P/ASX 200 slips 0.7% for the week as materials lag

The S&P/ASX 200 fell about 0.7% this week, weighed down as the index dropped in most sessions before steadying Friday. Materials shares tried to bounce after sliding for six sessions. Moves mostly tracked commodity prices, not earnings. Iron ore was on pace for its seventh weekly drop—its worst streak since 2022. Several industrial metals also lost ground.  Asx 

BHP Group , Rio Tinto and Fortescue came under pressure while other sectors held up. Breadth looked better than the headline index, with Australia’s top miners making up so much of the benchmark.

Australia’s new economic numbers sharpened the divergence in markets. Consumer inflation cooled more than markets forecast but jobs data stayed solid, leaving traders split over the Reserve Bank of Australia’s next move on rates this year. Investors stepped up buying in healthcare, retail, and tech stocks that react to rates, even as resource shares stayed weak with softer commodity prices.

Investors paid less attention to one point this week: aside from the top mining stocks, local sectors showed some resilience as rate uncertainty lingered. That points to a possible shift, with money moving into firms tied to Australian consumption rather than those linked to China’s industrial cycle. This change could stand out more if iron ore prices stay under their recent peaks.

Miners dragged on the market Thursday, taking the edge off gains in most other groups. Healthcare stocks like CSL moved up, with retailers Wesfarmers  and JB Hi-Fi  also trading higher. Still, the big resource names weighed on the index. Shares of Judo Capital  sank after the lender cut its earnings view, extending a string of negative surprises this week.

Friday offered some relief but it didn’t last. Gold stocks came back early, iron ore names climbed off lows, but most commodity markets kept falling. Market Index said the resources sector dropped nearly 10% after six losses in a row. Friday’s small bounce faded as the afternoon went on. 

The stronger U.S. dollar is hitting Australia’s materials sector, Tony Sycamore at IG said, citing the negative link between the greenback and metal prices. 

Rotation into local names may have gone “a little overdone,” Justin Lin, investment strategist at Global X ETFs Australia, said. Lin added that investors were reassessing where commodity-linked earnings land.  News

Chinese manufacturing numbers, RBA signals, and early earnings updates are on the radar, with reporting season near. But the local market could move more on where commodity prices go next, after miners saw one of their worst weeks of the year. Australian shares may take their cue from whether the slide in resources can pause, not so much from domestic data.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • Lindian Resources' Singapore Office Shift and Its Impact on Rare Earths Strategy
    June 27, 2026, 6:53 AM EDT. Lindian Resources (ASX:LIN) has established a regional office in Singapore to internalise sales, marketing, and logistics for rare earth products after ending a third-party agreement. This strategic move aims to enhance control over customer relationships and commercial terms amid expanding operations. Despite this, Lindian remains a high-risk investment with ongoing losses of A$8.79 million in the latest half-year and no current revenue. The company's Singapore pivot underscores its commitment to commercial execution as it transitions from explorer to producer. Market opinions on Lindian's fair value vary widely, ranging from A$0.08 to A$0.75, highlighting investor uncertainty. The new hub could be pivotal in securing offtake agreements but does not mitigate key project and financing risks.