Today: 14 July 2026
Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Falls For Fifth Day As Oil Shock Hits Banks, Origin
14 July 2026
2 mins read

ASX 200 holds steady as oil jumps 9%

Sydney, July 14, 2026, 09:27 AEST

ASX futures pointed to just a minor dip for Australian shares Tuesday, with SPI 200 futures off 8 points, or 0.09%, at 08:32 AEST. That comes even as oil surged more than 9% and the Nasdaq slid 1.55%. The ASX 200’s big weighting in banks and energy is helping buffer local stocks compared to tech-heavy markets overseas.

The ASX 200 managed to close up 2.5 points at 8,808.5 on Monday. But out of the wider ASX 300, 170 stocks finished lower and just 112 advanced. Tech fell 2.48%. Financials put on 0.67% and energy edged up 0.66%.

Financials make up 33.3% of the ASX 200, while tech only accounts for 2.1%. With those weights and Monday’s sector shifts, a rough read has financials adding 0.22 percentage point to the index and tech subtracting 0.05. Stripping out the gains from financials, the rest of the benchmark dropped by about 0.19 point. The top-level index stayed flat, but most of the market didn’t.

Brent closed up 9.6% at $83.30 a barrel overnight, but the Nasdaq dropped 1.55%. U.S. 10-year Treasury yields ticked up to 4.62% and gold lost 3% to $3,998.52. “More of the same uncertainty surrounding where the Middle East stands,” said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth. Reuters

Market signalLatest moveRead-through for Australian shares
SPI 200 futuresFell 8 points, or 0.09%Flat start likely
ASX 200 on MondayEdged up 0.03% to 8,808.5Index held up even as breadth stayed weak
Nasdaq CompositeSank 1.55%Hits local tech names
Brent crudeJumped 9.6% to $83.30Helps energy stocks, but adds to inflation pressures
U.S. 10-year yieldClimbed to 4.62%Raises equity valuation bar

Santos and Beach Energy were among the oil producers seen as winners from the crude price move. Xero headed the other way, dropping 4.3% on Monday after news that CEO Sukhinder Singh Cassidy sold 29,608 shares at A$74 each to cover personal tax bills.

Australian tech stocks could feel the global chip pullback, but the sector’s small role in the index means the main gauge won’t take a big hit. Thomas Martin, senior portfolio manager at GLOBALT, said the pace of semiconductor gains had put the rally in question. “How sustainable is it?” he said. Martin added there’s “less cushion” in the market now and plenty that’s unknown. Reuters

Australian investors may be watching oil’s impact on inflation more than the Nasdaq’s fall. The Reserve Bank of Australia kept its cash rate steady at 4.35% after three hikes earlier this year. In June, the RBA said inflation was still too high. The next read on local sentiment drops at 11 a.m. AEST, when the Melbourne Institute releases its consumer-sentiment index. The June number, 80.6, was near the bottom for the survey in five decades.

If problems around the Strait of Hormuz drag on, the support from banks and energy stocks may fade. Commonwealth Bank of Australia commodities analyst Vivek Dhar said on Monday that current prices suggest investors still expect the strait to stay open. Dhar also said stocks outside the Gulf would not last long if flows were cut, with depletion risks coming back fast. In a worse-case, Dhar sees Brent jumping to $150 a barrel to trigger “demand destruction” and curb consumption. That could help producers, but would likely hit transport firms, retailers, households, and rate-sensitive shares. ABC News

Tuesday’s index move looks set to be minor on the surface, but underneath expect a bigger shift. Energy should run stronger, technology and precious-metal miners face some pressure, and banks could tip the balance for the benchmark. Watch market breadth—not just the index close. Monday was a reminder that one-third of names can mask what’s happening to most of the market.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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