Sydney, June 9, 2026, 02:03 (AEST)
- Westpac fell 1.2% on Friday to close at A$34.81, down 3.3% for the week.
- The ASX cash market didn’t open Monday. The King’s Birthday holiday kept the market shut.
- Westpac is set to deliver its consumer banking update Thursday, with investors watching.
Westpac Banking Corp is set to open lower Tuesday after the holiday break, with shares last trading at A$34.81. Investors are considering a weak showing from Australian bank stocks and Westpac’s latest regional banking plans. The ASX was shut Monday for the King’s Birthday, so Friday’s close is the most recent price.
Westpac dropped 3.31% in the last seven days to its most recent close. The S&P/ASX 200, which tracks big Australian stocks, finished Friday at 8,625.12, down 0.70%.
Westpac has its consumer update set for Thursday, June 11 at 10 a.m., with Carolyn McCann, chief executive for consumer banking, expected to talk about mortgages, deposits, and bank margins — the difference between rates earned on loans and paid on funding. Investors will be looking for more details during the session.
Westpac will extend its Community Banking Service to six towns in regional Queensland and spend over A$10 million to update six branches and business banking centres across the state, the bank said Monday. The Community Banking Service sends bankers to towns that don’t have a full Westpac branch and offers in-person support.
Chief Executive Anthony Miller said, “a one-size-fits-all model doesn’t always work” for regional areas, adding that “people still like face-to-face service.” The bank needs to balance digital and in-person banking, Miller said, to give customers the service that fits. Westpac
Bank stocks took a hit Friday, with Commonwealth Bank losing 1.7%, Westpac down 1.2%, National Australia Bank off 1.1% and ANZ lower by 1.0%, according to Market Index. The branch news was just one part of the day’s moves across the sector.
Rates are still the main issue. The Reserve Bank of Australia has its cash rate target — the overnight benchmark guiding mortgages and deposits — stuck at 4.35%. The next decision comes at 2:30 p.m. on June 16.
Westpac’s May half-year numbers showed a statutory net profit of A$3.4 billion. The common equity tier 1 capital ratio came in at 12.4%. The bank said it would pay a 77 Australian cents interim dividend. At the time, Miller called it “solid operating momentum” and said the bank was investing for future growth.
Bears have a case if Thursday’s consumer update signals softer housing loan demand, pressure on margins, or rising arrears. That could mean more selling on Friday. Morgan Stanley’s Richard Wiles told Reuters that operating conditions for banks had “shifted so quickly” as rate hikes, policy tweaks and energy shocks create a “far more uncertain outlook.” Reuters
Westpac shares are stuck between the slow story of regional growth and a harder macro setup. Which way traders move at Tuesday’s open will say what counts more right now.