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Why Macquarie Group stock (ASX:MQG) rose today: filings, funding and the next catalyst
8 January 2026
1 min read

Why Macquarie Group stock (ASX:MQG) rose today: filings, funding and the next catalyst

Sydney, Jan 8, 2026, 17:21 (AEDT) — Market closed

Macquarie Group Ltd stock (MQG.AX) ended Thursday up 0.9% at A$208.69, after trading between A$206.56 and A$210.09. Turnover of about 557,000 shares was roughly half its three-month average, according to Investing.com.

The move comes as investors hunt for early clues on where the bank is putting money and how its client flows look in the new year. Macquarie runs a big asset manager and a markets business that can swing with funding costs and risk appetite.

Those cross-currents are back in focus after a choppy start to January in rates markets, with traders still split on how fast major central banks can cut. For Macquarie, a firmer yield curve can lift some lending margins but can also make it harder to raise money and close deals.

Filings this week showed Macquarie has been trimming stakes held across the group in smaller listed companies. In Form 605 notices signed by assistant company secretary Olivia Shepherd, the firm said it ceased to be a “substantial holder” — Australian disclosure jargon for owning 5% or more of voting shares — in Elsight and Jumbo Interactive. The notices put the effective dates at Jan 2 and Dec 31, respectively.

Separately, U.S.-listed Applied Digital said it drew an additional $562.5 million from a preferred equity financing facility provided by Macquarie Asset Management, with a further $337.5 million pulled after the quarter end. The facility can provide up to $5 billion, the company said. Preferred equity sits between debt and common stock and usually carries a fixed return.

Investors in Macquarie have kept a close eye on the group’s private markets exposure as the bank has pushed deeper into infrastructure, renewables and private credit. Thursday’s range left A$210 as a near-term line on charts, with sellers showing up there again.

But the stock still tends to move with global risk mood, and that can turn fast. A jump in yields or a hit to commodity prices could dull trading income and weigh on valuations in its asset management unit.

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