Today: 30 June 2026
Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Ends Lower but Still Logs Best Week Since 2022
10 April 2026
2 mins read

Australia Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Ends Lower but Still Logs Best Week Since 2022

SYDNEY, April 10, 2026, 20:22 AEST

Australian shares finished in the red on Friday, but the benchmark still managed its best weekly showing since late 2022. A possible U.S.-Iran truce helped the week’s relief rally hold. The S&P/ASX 200 gave up 12.6 points, or 0.14%, to close at 8,960.6. BHP dropped 1.1%, Fortescue lost 1.3%, and Santos slipped 0.6%.

Australia’s exposure to the six-week Middle East war has been pronounced, given the Strait of Hormuz—a tight Gulf corridor accounting for nearly a fifth of global oil trade—has kept both supply jitters and inflation risks front and center. The ASX 200 still managed to close the week higher by about 4.4%, despite Friday’s dip. With U.S.-Iran talks set for the weekend in Islamabad, the ceasefire remains far from secure.

Thursday’s numbers told the story: the index edged up 0.2%, marking a five-week high. Still, trading volumes lagged behind the 30-day average. According to Luke Winchester, portfolio manager at Merewether Capital, investor enthusiasm had “certainly been tempered”—ongoing fighting in Lebanon and infrastructure hits near the Strait of Hormuz gave plenty of people reason to stay cautious. indopremier.com

Friday’s action split the board. Real estate, utilities, and financials all ended higher—Commonwealth Bank tacked on 0.5%. Materials slid 0.67%, and tech names slumped 1.84%. Telix Pharmaceuticals rallied 7.3% after U.S. regulators signed off on its resubmitted brain cancer imaging application. AMP picked up 4.2% following a positive annual meeting.

Australia trailed the wider upswing in risk assets. Wall Street edged higher Thursday—oil’s rally cooled as Middle East peace talks resurfaced. Japan’s Nikkei tacked on 1.65% Friday, crude holding under $100 a barrel, with money shifting into stocks tied to earnings.

The pattern played out in currencies too—relief, but not real confidence. The Australian dollar hovered just over 70 U.S. cents, tracking toward a weekly gain close to 3%. Jason Wong, senior strategist at BNZ, put it simply: the “tail risk of a really bad outcome” seems to have eased, though the truce remains on uncertain ground. Reuters

Companies aren’t waiting around. Fortescue plans to accelerate its off-grid green power push across Pilbara mining sites. “How vulnerable our supply chains are”—that’s how Dino Otranto, CEO of metals and operations, put it, pointing to the conflict’s fallout. On a separate front, Australia and Singapore agreed to tighten energy cooperation. The backdrop: panic buying emptied some Aussie petrol stations. Reuters

The stakes are clear. Barclays analyst Amarpreet Singh flagged that any holdup in resuming shipping through Hormuz risks pushing oil prices above where they sit now. Over at the Asian Development Bank, Chief Economist Albert Park described the ceasefire as “fairly fragile,” adding that policymakers need to brace for more inflation and possible financial strains if the disruption persists. Reuters

Signs of unease are creeping into official projections. For the first time, Canberra has postponed its quarterly resources and energy outlook, blaming “extreme volatility” for rendering the latest figures outdated — a rare pause in a sector where banks and miners typically drive most of the action. Reuters

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

  • Asian stocks edge higher as Wall Street rallies, oil steadies
    June 30, 2026, 1:29 AM EDT. Asian shares traded mostly higher on Tuesday as Wall Street gains lifted sentiment and oil prices steadied. South Korea's market bounced back after a tech-driven slide. Traders pointed to firmer oil as helping the move. Tech names clawed back some losses and investors bought back in after last week's sharp drop.
Dow Jones Today: Industrial Average Rises as Iran Ceasefire Hopes Offset Oil and Fed Fears
Previous Story

Dow Jones Today: Industrial Average Rises as Iran Ceasefire Hopes Offset Oil and Fed Fears

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz
Next Story

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 16.04.2026

Go toTop