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Westpac stock (ASX:WBC) ends first 2026 session higher as inflation data looms
4 January 2026
2 mins read

Westpac stock (ASX:WBC) ends first 2026 session higher as inflation data looms

SYDNEY, Jan 4, 2026, 16:06 ET — Market closed

  • Westpac last closed at A$38.95, up 0.9% in the first session of 2026.
  • Australian inflation data on Jan. 7 is the next near-term macro trigger for bank shares.
  • Westpac’s next scheduled company update is its first-quarter results on Feb. 13.

Westpac Banking Corp (WBC.AX) shares rose in Sydney’s first trading session of 2026, with investors turning quickly to inflation and central-bank signals that can sway bank earnings and valuations.

The move matters because banks are among the most rate-sensitive stocks on the Australian market. Shifts in interest-rate expectations can change how investors value future profits and dividends, and can feed directly into mortgage pricing and funding costs.

It also lands as Australia’s inflation reporting cadence has shifted, giving markets more frequent readouts to price the Reserve Bank of Australia’s next steps. That can tighten or loosen the range for bank share prices even when there is no company-specific news.

Westpac ended Friday at A$38.95, up 0.35 Australian dollars, after trading between A$38.48 and A$38.95, price data showed. Commonwealth Bank of Australia, National Australia Bank and ANZ Group also finished slightly firmer on the day, keeping the “big four” lenders moving in the same direction. Market Index

Global rate expectations are in the mix as well. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Anna Paulson said she expected inflation to moderate and, “If all of that happens, then some modest further adjustments to the funds rate would likely be appropriate later in the year,” in remarks prepared for a speech. Reuters

For Australian banks, the next domestic signpost is Wednesday’s Consumer Price Index release for November (11:30 a.m. AEDT), which can reshape bets for the RBA’s February policy decision. A hotter print can lift bond yields and funding costs, while easing inflation can revive expectations for a friendlier rate path.

The RBA’s first Monetary Policy Board meeting of the year runs Feb. 2–3, with the decision due on the second day, the central bank has said. Investors in bank shares tend to watch the statement for clues on how long rates may stay restrictive.

Company-specific attention turns next to Westpac’s first-quarter results on Feb. 13, according to its financial calendar. Traders will be looking for any shift in net interest margin — the spread between what a bank earns on loans and pays on deposits — along with updates on mortgage competition and bad-debt trends.

On the chart, traders have marked A$39.00 as the first nearby psychological level, with support around Friday’s low of A$38.48. Investing.com data showed Westpac’s 52-week range at A$28.44 to A$41.00, leaving the stock below its recent peak but well off last year’s trough.

But risks run both ways. A firmer inflation print could push rate expectations higher, which can pressure bank valuations and raise concerns about household stress in Australia’s mortgage-heavy market; a softer number could do the opposite, but would sharpen scrutiny on whether margins are being squeezed by intense deposit and home-loan competition.

The next immediate catalyst for Westpac shares is Australia’s CPI release on Jan. 7, a data point investors will use to reset rate bets before the market’s focus shifts toward the RBA’s February decision and Westpac’s Feb. 13 update.

Stock Market Today

  • Dollar Index Edges Up as Oil Prices Surge and Stocks Decline
    June 10, 2026, 5:59 PM EDT. The dollar index rose slightly by 0.06% on Wednesday, recovering from early losses. A more than 2% surge in WTI crude oil prices raised inflation expectations, supporting the U.S. dollar amid concerns over potential Federal Reserve monetary tightening. The U.S. May Consumer Price Index matched forecasts, with inflation still at a three-year high. Concurrently, geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and Iran increased safe-haven demand for the dollar. In Europe, the euro gained modestly amid expectations of a European Central Bank interest rate hike, though oil price gains restricted upside. The Japanese yen fell to a five-week low against the dollar, pressured by rising crude prices and U.S. Treasury yields, despite hawkish signals from Japan's producer price data and central bank.

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