Sydney, June 24, 2026, 06:04 AEST
Scentre Group shares closed 2 cents lower at A$3.83 on Tuesday, off 0.5%, after hitting A$3.88 earlier in the session. With the Australian market shut at press time, A$3.83 is the last price for the Westfield shopping centre owner.
Property stocks watch bond yields, so the changes here are important. Higher rates also push up borrowing costs. The Reserve Bank of Australia left its cash rate steady at 4.35% last week, after raising it three times by 25 basis points in 2026. The central bank said inflation was still too high.
May inflation numbers land Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. AEST. Labour-force stats for May come Thursday. Strong data could crank up talk of higher rates. Weak numbers would likely take some heat off property stocks that react to rate shifts.
S&P/ASX 200 ended down 0.3% Tuesday at 8,787. “A hawkish Fed outlook lifts yields and the US dollar,” IG’s Tony Sycamore said, pressuring markets in the region before Australian numbers come out. Intelligent Investor
Scentre slipped about the same as other retail REITs. Stockland dropped 0.5% to A$4.16, and Vicinity Centres eased 0.4% to A$2.56.
Scentre shares moved without new operating news from the company. The latest filings on the announcement list were June 1 securities notices, with no fresh ASX update before Tuesday’s trading. The session looked shaped by broader rate moves and market trends, not Scentre-specific news.
Scentre’s mall business held up in the first quarter. Tenant sales climbed 5% to A$7 billion. Occupancy came in at 99.8%. Specialty rents rose 5.3% on average. CEO Elliott Rusanow said customer visitation was “growing across all regions.” The company kept its 2026 funds from operations target, aiming for growth of at least 4% to 23.73 cents per security, excluding some property-valuation impacts. Scentre Group
The group is guiding for a 4% lift in distributions to 18.43 cents per security. On Tuesday’s price, that implies a yield of about 4.8%. The payout isn’t locked in and doesn’t match the risk-free cash rate.
Funding costs are still a factor. In April, Scentre raised A$750 million by selling six-year senior notes at a 5.85% fixed coupon. The money went to pay down older debt and bank loans.
But if inflation runs hot, market yields could jump again, which would hit property values and raise refinancing costs. Scentre warned that weaker household demand is also a risk. The company said geopolitical volatility and what it could mean for shoppers might hit the 2026 outlook, but Scentre is still sticking to its earnings and distribution guidance.
For Wednesday, the focus shifts away from mall occupancy. Investors are watching if the inflation numbers keep bets on rates staying elevated.