HomeReportsThe Match Out: Stocks retreat from early highs, close…
A strong open for the local market however the best of the session was seen before little lunch with the ASX ending flat on the day, closing ~46 points below the session high, back below the 7000 handle. IT stocks continued to perform, particularly the small caps while Energy & Materials fell.
The ASX pulled back sharply today as AI-related margin fears continued to drive aggressive selling across software and high-multiple names. Despite the weak finish, the market still closed the week up ~2.4%, underpinned by a fantastic week from the banks on better-than-expected results.
The ASX 200 tested its all-time high at lunchtime yesterday before peeling away to close up just +0.3% as the dramatic polarisation across the ASX continues in earnest - already in 2026, we’ve witnessed the Tech Sector hammered by over -20% while the Materials have gained more than +12%, compounding the dramatic rotation through FY26. It's becoming almost monotonous to quote how far the major tech names have fallen day to day. However, it's hard to ignore; it felt like capitulation on Thursday, but there's already been a few chapters in that particular scary book - on the day, SiteMinder (SDR) -12.9%, Xero (XRO) -8.4%, Life360 (360) -8.3%, and Technology One (TNE) -6.9%.
The ASX pushed higher for a second straight session, flirting with fresh record highs at the 9100 level as bank earnings momentum continued to drive the index. ANZ stole the show with its best day in six years after delivering a standout quarterly profit result, and the broader financials complex stayed well bid, compounding Commonwealth Bank’s strong result yesterday.
The ASX 200 soared +1.7%, enjoying its best day since October, posting 3-month highs in the process. Rallies by the heavyweight financials and materials sectors drove the move, led by strong earnings beats from Commonwealth Bank (CBA) and James Hardie (JHX). Although 8 of the main 11 sectors closed higher, the financials dominated the day, contributing 70% of the main boards' gain following the storming performance by CBA after its 1H profit topped expectations - more on the banks later.
The ASX surged toward all-time high territory, lifted by a string of earnings beats from heavyweight banks and industrials, helping the index shake off weakness in healthcare. Financials did the heavy lifting, with Commonwealth Bank delivering its best day since 2020, while miners also provided strong support as copper and gold prices stayed elevated.
The ASX200 surrendered its early gains on Tuesday to end marginally lower after being up almost 60-points early in the session. Eight of 11 local sectors ended the session higher, as strong miners, energy, and IT stocks offset a 1.1% slump in the financial sector, with the insurers weak and bank selling gathering momentum during the day.
A mixed session for the ASX played out under the hood today with tech the clear standout and miners remaining firm after a strong start to the week as the bourse closed on the low of the day and almost +60pts from its high. Insurance stocks were hit as fresh fears emerged around AI disruption in the insurance-broking industry, with banks following suit into the afternoon.
Monday saw the currently fickle ASX 200 surge +1.9%, its best trading day since April, just one session after it plunged 2%. Yesterday’s gains were broad-based with all 11 sectors advancing along with 90% of the stocks, while the tech, real estate and materials sectors all gained by 3% or more.
The ASX staged a sharp relief rally today, with the main board chalking up its strongest single day move since April 25. The move followed last week’s aggressive sell-off and was driven by dip-buying across technology and resource stocks, with all 11 sectors higher.
What a week. Markets ran for cover as fears mounted that artificial intelligence (AI) could render many software business models redundant, or at least sharply devalue them. The issue was compounded by the fact that many of these software names were trading on lofty valuations in the anticipation of unrelenting growth. The potential risk of contraction compared to expansion has seen numerous household names halve in value over the last 6 months, from Xero and WiseTech on the ASX to Atlassian and Adobe in the US.
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