Westpac’s $7 Billion Windfall Ignites ASX Rally Despite Mining Slump – Nov 3, 2025

Australian Stock Market Today: ASX 200 Ends Flat Near Four‑Month Low as Banks Slide, Tech and Energy Gain (17 November 2025)

Sydney – Monday, 17 November 2025 (AEDT)

The Australian stock market delivered a nervy but ultimately directionless session on Monday, with the S&P/ASX 200 closing almost exactly where it started. Heavy selling in the big banks and lingering global “risk‑off” sentiment were offset by gains in energy, technology and rare earth miners, leaving the benchmark hovering near four‑month lows. [1]


ASX 200 Today: Key Numbers for 17 November 2025

  • S&P/ASX 200 close: ~8,635 points, effectively flat on the day and up around 0.02%, after recovering from losses of up to 0.5% earlier in the session. [2]
  • All Ordinaries: slightly firmer, up about 0.1%. [3]
  • Market level: the ASX 200 is holding near its lowest closing level since mid‑July, despite today’s stabilisation. [4]
  • Volatility: the S&P/ASX 200 VIX slipped to around 12.2, signalling relatively calm implied volatility despite recent price falls. [5]
  • Market breadth: advancing stocks narrowly outnumbered decliners (about 596 vs 551), with more than 400 names unchanged. [6]

Sector moves were mixed:

  • Financials: down around 0.2%, closing near a four‑month low. [7]
  • Energy: up about 1.1%, the strongest one‑day gain in roughly a week. [8]
  • Information Technology: up roughly 1.2%. [9]
  • A‑REITs / Property trusts: broadly higher, helping prop up the index into the close. [10]

On the macro side, gold futures slipped close to 1% and oil prices eased around 1%, while the Australian dollar traded near US$0.65, little changed on the day. [11]


Banks and Financials Weigh on the Australian Share Market

The biggest drag on the ASX 200 once again came from the financial sector, where Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) and Macquarie Group extended sharp recent falls.

  • The financials index edged down roughly 0.2% to a near four‑month low. [12]
  • CBA lost close to 1%, finishing at a seven‑month low and taking its decline to more than 10% since early last week after a soft quarterly update and renewed margin‑pressure worries. [13]
  • Macquarie Group fell about 2.3% as the stock traded ex‑dividend and continued to digest weaker‑than‑expected earnings. [14]
  • By contrast, peers ANZ and Westpac each closed around 0.6% higher, with some analysts now citing them as preferred picks among the big four. [15]

Recent coverage of CBA’s Q1 FY26 trading update highlighted modestly higher profits but rising costs, pressure on net interest margins and a dip in regulatory capital ratios. That combination has forced investors to reassess what had been viewed as a premium‑valued bank trading at rich earnings multiples. [16]

Beyond individual names, interest‑rate expectations also weighed on sentiment. Interest‑rate swaps now imply only about a 36% probability of an RBA rate cut by May, down from around 70% a week ago, as stronger economic data point to a more stubborn inflation outlook. [17]


Energy, Property and Tech Mount a Comeback

Offsetting the weakness in banks, energy, property and technology stocks provided much of today’s upward pressure.

Energy stocks ride sector strength

The energy sector rose about 1.1%, its best session in roughly a week, defying modest intraday weakness in crude oil prices. [18]

  • Heavyweight Woodside Energy added close to 1% amid reports it is poised to sign a US LNG supply deal with Saudi Aramco next week, helping underpin sentiment in the sector. [19]
  • Uranium and coal names also clawed back ground, contributing to the broader energy outperformance. [20]

Property trusts rebound

A‑REITs and property plays gained ground, aided by company‑specific news:

  • Charter Hall was among the better performers after signing Bank of Queensland as a long‑term tenant in its new Brisbane tower, a deal that bolstered confidence in office‑leasing demand. [21]

These moves helped the market stabilise after last week’s steep sell‑off in rate‑sensitive sectors. [22]

Tech stocks shake off the AI unwind

The technology sector climbed around 1.2%, following a brutal week in which momentum and AI‑themed trades were aggressively unwound both locally and offshore. [23]

Among the notable gainers:

  • WiseTech Global, Technology One and NextDC all posted solid gains, contributing to the sector’s outperformance. [24]

Today’s bounce comes against a backdrop of global volatility in growth stocks. Market commentators noted that algorithmic and momentum strategies have been rapidly trimming high‑beta names, leading to sharp swings in tech valuations over recent weeks. [25]


Resources and Rare Earths: BHP Hit by Dam Ruling as Lynas and Iluka Rally

The materials sector presented a split picture: rare earth producers surged, while major diversified miners remained under pressure.

BHP dragged by UK court ruling

BHP Group slipped around 0.6%, underperforming peers, as investors continued to digest a recent English High Court decision that found the company liable under Brazilian environmental law for the catastrophic 2015 Samarco dam collapse. [26]

The ruling, which relates to damages from tailings pollution along Brazil’s Doce River system, raises uncertainty over the ultimate cost of remediation and compensation and adds another legal overhang to BHP’s investment case. [27]

Rare earths shine

In contrast, rare earth miners were among the best performers on the market:

  • Lynas Rare Earths rose about 5.5%.
  • Iluka Resources gained roughly 5.7%. [28]

ABC’s live market blog also noted Arafura joining the rare‑earth rally, with the sub‑sector benefitting from renewed interest in strategic minerals amid ongoing supply‑chain and geopolitical themes. [29]

Mixed day for other miners

  • Rio Tinto added around 0.6% after announcing it would halt development of its BioIron decarbonisation technology and instead commit $35 million to Calix for a new zero‑emissions steel demonstration plant in Kwinana. [30]
  • Fortescue posted gains of roughly 1%, helping offset weakness in BHP. [31]
  • Gold miners underperformed as bullion prices eased, with investors locking in profits after gold’s recent strength. [32]

Short‑Seller Crossfire: DroneShield and IperionX Dominate Stock‑Specific Headlines

Two names dominated the “story stocks” list on the ASX 200 today: DroneShield and IperionX, both caught in the crosshairs of governance concerns and short‑seller scrutiny.

DroneShield rebounds after executive sell‑off

DroneShield (DRO) was the top gainer on the ASX 200, jumping about 11–12% after investors stepped back into the stock following a brutal week of selling. [33]

The bounce follows disclosures that:

  • CEO Oleg Vornik sold his entire holding, worth around $50 million, between 6 and 12 November.
  • The company’s chair and another director also exited their stakes, bringing total executive share sales to roughly $66.8 million. [34]

Those sales triggered a plunge of more than 25–30% last week and raised questions about alignment between management and shareholders. Today’s rebound suggests some bargain‑hunting and short‑covering rather than a clear endorsement that the controversy has passed. [35]

IperionX responds to Spruce Point short report

Titanium and critical‑minerals stock IperionX (IPX) had another volatile session:

  • Mid‑session, the stock was down nearly 10%, leading losses on the ASX 200. [36]
  • By the close, it had trimmed those losses to around –3%, still among the day’s worst performers. [37]

The pressure follows a detailed short‑seller report from Spruce Point Capital, which questioned aspects of IperionX’s technology and project pipeline. [38]

IperionX has pushed back, saying it has no record of meaningful engagement from the short seller before publication and defending its titanium technology and government‑backed projects. [39]

Together, DroneShield and IperionX underscore how executive share sales and short‑seller campaigns can rapidly reshape sentiment in highly valued growth names, even when broader index moves are modest.


Other Standout Movers: Elders, Pro Medicus and More

Beyond the headline names, several stocks posted notable moves on company‑specific news:

  • Elders surged about 6.3% after reporting a 12% rise in full‑year statutory profit after tax to $50.3 million, coupled with an “optimistic” outlook for FY26, supported by its acquisition of Delta Agribusiness. [40]
  • Pro Medicus climbed roughly 4.2% on news of a US$44 million deal with US radiology group Advanced Radiology Management for its Visage 7 enterprise imaging platform, reinforcing its position in premium medical software. [41]

Among the laggards:

  • Regis Resources slipped just over 3%, tracking weaker gold prices late in the session. [42]
  • Vault Minerals also fell, alongside IperionX, in a broader pullback among smaller resources names. [43]

Global Backdrop: Rate‑Cut Hopes Fade and “Correction, Not Crash” Narrative Builds

Today’s hesitant trading came after a rough week for global equity markets, driven by:

  • Hawkish comments from US Federal Reserve officials, which have dialled back expectations for a December rate cut. [44]
  • A broad unwinding of AI and high‑beta trades, with momentum strategies reversing sharply and bond‑market volatility spiking. [45]
  • Major US indices finishing last session mixed, with the S&P 500 near flat, the Dow Jones weaker and the Nasdaq eking out small gains. [46]

Locally, commentators note that:

  • After a strong year in which the ASX 200 was up about 10.9% year‑to‑date, the index has now dropped roughly 5.3% since late October, largely due to a sell‑off in blue‑chip leaders such as CBA, CSL, Macquarie, Goodman Group and Wesfarmers. [47]
  • Strategists at major brokers describe the pullback as a correction rather than the end of the bull phase, pointing to resilient consumer confidence and constructive business‑conditions surveys. [48]
  • Some houses still project double‑digit total returns over the next 12 months, with one scenario placing the ASX 200 around 9,250 in a year if earnings stabilise and global central banks move gradually into easing cycles. [49]

At the same time, opinion pieces published today warn that elevated US valuations and higher bond yields keep the risk of further volatility in play, even as the local index cools from its highs. [50]


What Today’s Session Means for Australian Investors

While the headline index finished flat, today’s trading reveals several important themes for anyone following the Australian share market:

  1. Banks are still the swing factor. Ongoing weakness in CBA and Macquarie continues to cap index gains. How quickly these names stabilise after recent earnings will be crucial for the ASX 200’s next move. [51]
  2. Cyclical sectors are doing more of the lifting. Energy, property and select tech names stepped up today, suggesting investors are still hunting for growth and yield, even while trimming exposure to crowded financials and high‑beta favourites. [52]
  3. Stock‑specific risk is elevated. The sharp rebounds and sell‑offs in DroneShield and IperionX show how quickly sentiment can swing around executive dealings, legal rulings and short‑seller reports. Careful attention to governance and balance‑sheet strength remains essential. [53]
  4. Macro uncertainty isn’t going away. Fading rate‑cut hopes and volatile bond markets are likely to keep the “correction vs crash” debate alive, even as several strategists argue the underlying economic backdrop still supports equities over the medium term. [54]

For now, the ASX 200 has held the line at around 8,635 points, but the index remains just a bad banking session or weak global lead away from setting new multi‑month lows. As always, anyone considering investment decisions should combine daily market news with their own research and, where appropriate, professional financial advice.

I invested $100,000 in ASX ETFs… and got lucky #asx200 #investing

References

1. www.abc.net.au, 2. www.abc.net.au, 3. www.abc.net.au, 4. www.brecorder.com, 5. uk.investing.com, 6. uk.investing.com, 7. www.brecorder.com, 8. www.brecorder.com, 9. www.capitalbrief.com, 10. www.abc.net.au, 11. www.abc.net.au, 12. www.brecorder.com, 13. www.brecorder.com, 14. www.brecorder.com, 15. www.brecorder.com, 16. www.marketindex.com.au, 17. www.brecorder.com, 18. www.brecorder.com, 19. www.brecorder.com, 20. www.abc.net.au, 21. www.abc.net.au, 22. aapnews.aap.com.au, 23. www.capitalbrief.com, 24. www.capitalbrief.com, 25. www.marketindex.com.au, 26. www.abc.net.au, 27. www.judiciary.uk, 28. uk.investing.com, 29. www.abc.net.au, 30. www.capitalbrief.com, 31. www.abc.net.au, 32. www.abc.net.au, 33. www.abc.net.au, 34. www.afr.com, 35. www.bloomberg.com, 36. www.capitalbrief.com, 37. www.capitalbrief.com, 38. www.sprucepointcap.com, 39. www.capitalbrief.com, 40. www.capitalbrief.com, 41. www.capitalbrief.com, 42. www.abc.net.au, 43. uk.investing.com, 44. aapnews.aap.com.au, 45. www.marketindex.com.au, 46. www.marketindex.com.au, 47. www.sharecafe.com.au, 48. www.sharecafe.com.au, 49. www.sharecafe.com.au, 50. www.fool.com.au, 51. www.brecorder.com, 52. www.abc.net.au, 53. www.capitalbrief.com, 54. www.brecorder.com

Stock Market Today

  • Trump pardon of Binance founder Zhao sparks corruption accusations and DOJ independence concerns
    November 17, 2025, 11:54 AM EST. The presidential pardon of Binance founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ) has intensified scrutiny of Trump's clemency powers and raised questions about political influence over the Justice Department. Former Pardon Attorney Elizabeth G. Oyer argues the deal, tied to Binance's $4 billion fine and Zhao's 2023 guilty plea for failing to prevent money laundering, signals a potential shift in how clemency is used and threatens DOJ independence. Critics warn that blends of money, private interests, and foreign investment could erode public duty. Zhao denies direct ties to the Trump family; CBS News reports have highlighted Oyer's criticisms in interviews. The case fuels a broader debate about transparency, self-dealing, and the integrity of executive clemency in high-profile crypto matters.
World Liberty Financial (WLFI): Trump’s $5B DeFi Token Shaking Up Crypto and Stirring Controversy
Previous Story

World Liberty Financial (WLFI) News Today, 17 November 2025: Token Holds Key Support as CZ Pardon Uproar and New Money‑Laundering Probes Put Trump’s Crypto Venture Under Pressure

Stock Market Today, Nov. 13, 2025: Dow Slides as Disney Plunges and Tech Stocks Drop After Trump Ends Record Shutdown
Next Story

US Stock Market Today, November 17, 2025: Futures Rebound as Nvidia Earnings, Jobs Data and Fed Signals Take Center Stage

Go toTop