Today: 19 June 2026
ASX 200 Closes at Two-Week High, Miners Gain While Energy Falls on Oil Drop

ASX 200 Closes at Two-Week High, Miners Gain While Energy Falls on Oil Drop

Sydney, May 25, 2026, 20:03 AEST

  • The S&P/ASX 200 climbed 0.4% to finish at 8,692, marking its best close since May 11.
  • Miners were out front, but energy stocks dropped as crude slipped under $100 a barrel.
  • Investors are watching for Australia’s April inflation numbers, set for release Wednesday.

Australian shares ended Monday at their highest in two weeks after miners and gold stocks outperformed. The S&P/ASX 200 rose 35 points, or 0.4%, to 8,692, up for a third session. Oil fell as some traders bet on progress in U.S.-Iran talks, helping cool fears of a new inflation bump.

Australia’s market is reacting to oil, inflation and interest-rate worries. Oil’s drop eased concerns about high fuel costs keeping inflation up, but local energy producers took a hit from the lower price.

Australia’s April Consumer Price Index comes out Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. AEST, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The last CPI print was up 4.6% year over year in March, compared to 3.7% in February, which keeps pressure on the Reserve Bank of Australia as it heads into its June policy meeting.

Australian investors look “cautiously optimistic rather than outright bullish,” Marc Jocum, senior product and investment strategist at Global X ETFs, told Reuters. He said many are waiting for clearer geopolitical signs before taking on more risk. Trading volumes on the local bourse stayed under the 30-day average, Reuters said. The Business Times

Materials climbed 1.84% and the gold sub-index advanced 4.9%. BHP was up 0.7%, Rio Tinto rose 1.6%. Northern Star Resources jumped 5.5%, with Evolution Mining adding 4.3%.

Energy lagged. The sector dropped 2.4% to its lowest level since May 15. Woodside Energy lost 4.2%. Santos slid 3.6%. The fall in crude prices weighed on the near-term revenue outlook for oil and gas names.

Financial stocks slipped. The group dipped as Commonwealth Bank of Australia dropped 0.7%. Jocum said banks may keep moving apart, with lenders facing pressure to cut costs and improve efficiency to protect their earnings.

Charter Hall gained 6.7% after the group raised its FY26 operating earnings per security guidance to 103 cents, up from 100 cents. The property fund manager reported year-to-date gross equity inflows of $6.5 billion. CEO David Harrison said FY26 will be the “strongest year of capital raising” seen in Charter Hall’s 35-year run.

Guzman y Gomez shares were in focus again after the chain announced Friday it will shut its Chicago locations right away. Founder and co-CEO Steven Marks said the U.S. business needed “significantly more time and capital” than the team expected, and sales just didn’t hit targets.

GYG is now being sued in the U.S. by ex-workers who say they weren’t given enough notice ahead of store closures. A spokesperson said to Reuters the company is “confident” it followed the law. Reuters reported shares opened up more than 10% Monday before falling back. Reuters

The rally is shaky. A breakdown in Middle East talks or a bounce in oil could bring inflation worries right back, just as they did when rates climbed earlier this year. A higher-than-expected CPI on Wednesday would hit rate-sensitive sectors like property, banks, and consumer discretionary shares, making them prone to a pullback.

New Zealand’s S&P/NZX 50 edged down 0.2% to 12,970.28. Investors are looking ahead to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand meeting on Wednesday. A Reuters poll found most economists see the central bank keeping rates at 2.25%.

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the founder and CEO of TS2 Space, a satellite communications company serving customers around the world. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he has more than two decades of experience in telecommunications, satellite services and technology ventures. He writes about satellite communications, space technology, artificial intelligence and the stock market, with a particular focus on technology companies, semiconductors, emerging industries and the trends shaping global innovation.

Stock Market Today

  • New Zealand Shares Rise on US-Iran Agreement; SkyCity Entertainment Signs Heads of Agreement with South Australia
    June 19, 2026, 2:15 AM EDT. New Zealand shares climbed 0.99% on Friday, boosted by the US-Iran 14-point deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz. The S&P/NZX 50 Index closed at 13,495.63. Domestic data showed a May goods trade surplus of NZ$800 million, down from NZ$1.6 billion in April. March-quarter GDP data indicated monetary easing benefits through business investment and trade. In corporate news, SkyCity Entertainment Group entered a nonbinding heads of agreement with the South Australian Gambling Commissioner involving a AU$21 million total fine. Meanwhile, Rua Gold confirmed potential to expand its gold-antimony resource at Auld Creek, South Island.

Latest articles

Kardigan pops in first Nasdaq trading after $400 million IPO

Kardigan pops in first Nasdaq trading after $400 million IPO

19 June 2026
Kardigan surged 37.5% above its $16 IPO price to close at $22 after raising $400 million in an upsized Nasdaq debut, signaling renewed investor appetite for large biotech IPOs as the company advances three late-stage cardiovascular drug candidates.
Netflix Stock Is Paused for Memorial Day. Wall Street Is Watching Its $3 Billion Ad Bet
Previous Story

Netflix Stock Is Paused for Memorial Day. Wall Street Is Watching Its $3 Billion Ad Bet

Sivers Semiconductors moves up again, traders watch MSCI inclusion on Friday
Next Story

Sivers Semiconductors moves up again, traders watch MSCI inclusion on Friday

Go toTop