Sydney, March 4, 2026, 18:39 AEDT — Market closed.
- Xero closed up, bucking the sharp selloff that hit Australian shares.
- Xero’s latest data points to a slowdown in U.S. small-business sales growth toward the end of 2025, but payment times saw an uptick.
- March 5 arrives with traders eyeing oil, interest rates, and looking ahead to Xero’s results in May.
Xero Ltd (ASX: XRO) picked up 2% on Wednesday, finishing at A$80.46. Not many blue chips managed gains, with the S&P/ASX 200 falling 1.94% by the close. Market Index
This is important right now: Xero is close to the heart of the local tech scene. Rate moves and risk shifts hit it hard—it reacts quickly, and tends to pull sentiment along in its wake.
Investors are facing a calendar snag—little in the way of new earnings, but noise is everywhere. Xero is pushing out updates impacting both its ecosystem and its story on U.S. growth, just as markets wrestle with the next move for interest rates.
The previous session saw the stock finish at A$78.86, having swung from A$78.01 up to A$80.68, according to Reuters data. Reuters
Australian GDP jumped 0.8% in the December quarter, up 2.6% on the year—marking the sharpest annual gain in almost three years, according to Wednesday’s figures. Stephen Smith at Deloitte Access Economics said the data keeps the central bank “on high alert,” raising the odds for a rate move in May. IG’s Tony Sycamore noted consumers remain wary. Reuters
Growth stocks often take a hit when rates rise—future profits just don’t look as shiny to investors. Software has felt the pressure, fundamentals aside.
Xero on Tuesday released new U.S. small-business figures: sales growth averaged 2.4% year-on-year for 2025, but dipped to just 0.9% in the December quarter. Late payments came down, averaging 7.8 days. “Conditions can shift,” company economist Louise Southall noted. North America managing director Andrew Kanzer flagged policy uncertainty as the top risk. Xero
Xero has rolled out a fresh developer charging structure, replacing revenue-sharing for some third-party apps with tier-based fees calculated on customer connections and API data usage — that’s the pipeline enabling apps to tap into Xero’s data. The company also confirmed its revised terms now ban using Xero API data for training AI or machine-learning models. developer.xero.com
But the path forward isn’t certain. Higher borrowing costs, or a sudden spike in oil, might put pressure on small businesses and curb spending on subscriptions and extras. If developers push back against those rising costs, the platform narrative could get messier.
Thursday, March 5, brings the question: will the risk-off vibe stick around in global markets, weighing on local tech? Xero’s key date ahead is May 14, when it delivers FY26 full-year results. Xero