ASX Today Live News & Analysis
Australia's share market has ended the session slightly higher despite an escalation of tensions in the Persian Gulf boosting oil prices and dragging on risk sentiment.
The S&P/ASX200 edged 6.4 points higher on Monday, up 0.07 per cent, to 8,953.3, as the broader All Ordinaries rose 5.4 points, or 0.06 per cent, to 9,174.1.
The modest uptick came despite discouraging news from southwest Asia and signs of deadlock between the US and Iran, as each escalated their respective blockades of the Strait of Hormuz.
"Things in the Middle East don't look particularly flash if you take what's happening at the surface level on face value, but I think there's a lot of headline fatigue also," IG market analyst Tony Sycamore told AAP.
"We're just going to muddle through until we get to the point where something breaks, in terms of the data or the stalemate is broken, and I'm not sure what breaks first."
Energy stocks weighed heavily, dropping three per cent in a broad sector sell-off despite conflict concerns putting upward pressure on oil prices.
Woodside and Santos, along with coal and uranium producers, sold off.
Viva Energy tumbled nine per cent after coming out of a trading halt following a fire at its Geelong refinery.
The facility would be back up to 90 per cent of regular production capacity for jet fuel, diesel and petrol within a few weeks, the company said.
NAB and Worley trimmed their earnings outlooks due to Persian Gulf conflict impacts on fuel and transport costs, dragging their share prices more than three and five per cent lower respectively.
Logistics provider Qube flagged an up-to $30 million earnings hit for the 2025/26 financial year, but its share price was unscathed to end the session flat.
Consumer-facing sectors outperformed the market, with discretionaries and staples up more than 1.4 per cent each, thanks in part to rebounds in segment giants Wesfarmers, Woolworths and Coles.
The heavyweight financials sector crept 0.1 per cent lower, as NAB's tumble counterbalanced decent gains from CommBank and Westpac, which each improved by more than 0.7 per cent.
The raw materials sector traded roughly flat as mega miners BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue posted modest share price drops.
Gold producers were broadly higher, despite the precious metal easing to $US4,790 an ounce during the session.
In company news, Monash IVF shares dropped 5.9 per cent after it knocked back a takeover offer from a consortium including Genesis Capital Investment Management and Washington H Soul Pattinson Holdings.
Bourse operator ASX slipped 0.5 per cent to $58.77 as the first release of its updated clearance system went live.
Zip Co was the best performer of the top-200, rallying for a second session after Friday's guidance upgrade and strong transaction growth in the US.
The Australian dollar is buying 71.56 US cents, down from 71.63 US cents on Friday after briefly spiking above 72 US cents at the weekend for the first time in almost four years.
ON THE ASX:
The S&P/ASX200 rose 6.4 points, or 0.07 per cent, to 8,953.3.
The broader All Ordinaries gained 5.4 points, or 0.06 per cent, to 9,174.1.
The NZX 50 added 70.27 points (0.54%) to 12,975.94 while the Nikkei dropped -1042.44 points (-1.78%) at the time of writing, to be closed at 58,475.90
Companies commencing Ex-Dividend Trading Today (ASX 300):
Washington H. Soul Pattinson and Co. Limited
Markets
Index | Last price | Change | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Ordinaries | 9,174.10 | 12.00 | 0.13% |
| CAC 40 | 8,331.05 | 94.08 | -1.12% |
| DAX 40 | 24,417.80 | 284.44 | -1.15% |
| Dow JONES (US) | 49,387.34 | 60.09 | -0.12% |
| FTSE 100 | 10,609.08 | 58.55 | -0.55% |
| HKSE | 26,361.07 | 200.74 | 0.77% |
| NASDAQ | 24,378.14 | 90.34 | -0.37% |
| Nikkei 225 | 58,824.89 | 348.99 | 0.60% |
| NZX 50 Index | 12,915.45 | 9.78 | 0.08% |
| S&P 500 | 7,101.27 | 24.79 | -0.35% |
| S&P/ASX 200 | 8,953.30 | 13.60 | 0.15% |
| SSE Composite Index | 4,082.13 | 30.70 | 0.76% |