Australian equities remain under pressure as a renewed oil rally and hawkish global signals push rate expectations higher.
The Australia 200 trades 54 points (0.62%) lower at 8632.8 as of 2.45pm AEST.
The ASX 200 is poised for an eighth straight session of declines, its longest losing streak since 2018. Even so, the index is still on track to finish April with a gain of around 1.80%, a disappointing outcome after being more than 6% higher earlier in the month.
The softer session follows a mixed lead from Wall Street, where a more hawkish‑than‑expected Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) outcome, combined with a near 9% surge in oil prices to US$108.49, pushed United States (US) bond yields to nine‑month highs. This potent combination has weighed heavily on oil‑dependent Asian equity markets, including Australia, overshadowing solid after‑market earnings from three of the mega‑cap technology companies.
The renewed rally in crude oil has come at a highly sensitive time ahead of next week’s pivotal Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) board meeting. Yesterday’s softer‑than‑expected consumer price index (CPI) print briefly raised hopes that the central bank might pause, taking comfort from retreating petrol prices, steady underlying inflation readings and the opportunity to assess the federal government’s upcoming budget on 12 May. That window, however, now appears to have closed.
With West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil pushing above US$110 on reports that US Central Command has prepared targets for short, targeted strikes on Iran, supply and inflation concerns have been reignited. The probability of a 25 basis point (bp) RBA rate hike next Tuesday has climbed back above 80%, with around 70 bp of cumulative tightening now priced into the interest‑rate curve for 2026.
Despite the weakness at the index level, only three of the ASX 200’s sectors are trading lower on the day.
The clear underperformer is consumer staples.
The negative read‑through for other supermarket chains saw:
The influential materials sector also declined, with gold and uranium stocks leading the sell‑off.
In the volatile uranium space:
It was a mixed session for the major iron ore miners, despite the benchmark price edging 0.33% higher in Asia to US$107.40.
Local technology stocks advanced, supported by solid earnings reports released after the bell this morning from Alphabet and Amazon. These results more than offset a weaker update from Meta, which lifted its capital expenditure forecast to a range of US$125 billion - US$145 billion due to higher component and data‑centre costs.
From the 8262 low recorded on 23 March, the ASX 200 rallied 759 points, or 9.20%, to a mid‑April high of 9021.5. That advance then stalled, with the index slipping back below support from the key 200‑day moving average (MA), currently near 8802.
Looking ahead, the ASX 200 needs to reclaim the 200‑day MA on a closing basis to restore a constructive technical outlook and position for a retest of the 9200 record high. Failure to do so would warn of a deeper correction, with initial support located around the 8600 - 8580 zone.
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