Sydney, Jan 31, 2026, 16:49 AEDT — Market closed
- ANZ closed Friday at A$36.70, rising 0.71% despite a dip in the broader market.
- Futures on the Australian Securities Exchange suggest about a two‑thirds probability of a rate hike on Feb. 3.
- ANZ will release its first-quarter trading update on Feb. 12, marking its next key company event.
ANZ shares finished up on Friday, defying a weaker trend across the broader market as traders shifted focus to next week’s Reserve Bank of Australia rate decision.
This matters because banks bear the brunt of any rate move. Changes in the cash rate quickly ripple through mortgage rates, deposit competition, and credit demand, which can rapidly shift earnings momentum.
It arrives before ANZ’s first-quarter trading update, due mid-February, offering an early glimpse into loan growth and bad debts following a turbulent start to the year for risk assets.
ANZ closed at A$36.70 on Jan. 30, rising A$0.26. The stock fluctuated between A$36.46 and A$36.88 throughout the day. (Market Index)
The S&P/ASX 200 index dropped 0.65%, ending Friday at 8,869.10. (Yahoo Finance)
Derivatives pricing on the ASX rate tracker indicated a 67% probability of an interest-rate move at the February 3 meeting for the February 2026 cash-rate futures contract, according to end-of-day figures from January 29. (A basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point.) (Australian Securities Exchange)
Kieran Davies from Coolabah Capital noted that the RBA “rarely hikes rates once,” suggesting a lone increase might weaken the inflation signal. (Nabtrade)
For ANZ, the focus isn’t on a single day’s share movement but on how funding costs and lending margins ultimately shape up. Net interest margin—the gap between loan earnings and deposit costs—usually improves when loan repricing outpaces deposit rate hikes. Still, that advantage can shrink quickly if competition intensifies.
ANZ’s first-quarter trading update is set for Feb. 12, per the bank’s financial calendar. (ANZ)
But the setup isn’t without risk. Should the RBA stand pat or hint at less urgency than futures suggest, bank shares could quickly lose their rate-fueled gains; if it raises rates and squeezes households, markets might soon brace for bigger loan losses down the line.
Trading in Sydney restarts Monday as investors eye offshore bond action and adjust ahead of the RBA decision on Feb. 3. Then attention shifts to ANZ’s Feb. 12 update, delivering the first concrete data on the quarter’s start.