- A more constructive week for markets
- Key stories driving the shift
- Aussie indexes, broad move with clear leadership
- Global indexes, risk appetite returns
- ASX big movers, rotation still selective
- Commodities, oil cools but support remains
- Currencies, AUD reflects the shift
- Market takeaway, relief is here, conviction still forming
A more constructive week for markets
Australian markets delivered a far more constructive week, with the ASX 200 rising 4.41% across four trading sessions as financials and materials drove a broad recovery that felt more grounded in positioning and sentiment rather than a single macro catalyst.
It felt different. The tone shifted away from panic and into relief, as oil prices eased, the Australian dollar strengthened modestly, and investors rotated back into banks, miners, and higher-quality cyclicals after what had been a messy and headline-driven stretch.
Key stories driving the shift
The dominant theme this week was a move from fear to relief, with oil pulling back as the intensity of the Iran-related risk premium faded, which helped take pressure off inflation expectations and gave equity markets room to stabilise.
That shift mattered. Financials responded quickly to the change in rate expectations and sentiment, while materials continued to climb on firmer commodity prices and a slightly more constructive tone toward Chinese demand, even if conviction there still feels cautious rather than aggressive.
The refinery fire involving Viva Energy added a local layer of risk, although the market treated it as contained rather than systemic, with the broader focus remaining on oil and macro stability.
Aussie indexes, broad move with clear leadership
The headline move higher looked strong, but the internal rotation tells the more useful story for investors thinking about positioning. Banks and miners led.
| Index / Sector | Weekly Move |
|---|---|
| S&P/ASX 200 | +4.41% |
| Financials | +6.53% |
| Materials | +6.33% |
| A-REITs | +4.77% |
| Consumer Discretionary | +3.78% |
| Information Technology | +2.79% |
| Industrials | +2.32% |
| Healthcare | +1.16% |
| Communication | +1.12% |
| Consumer Staples | -0.32% |
| Utilities | -0.90% |
| Energy | -4.00% |
Financials pushed higher as rate pressure eased slightly and earnings confidence returned, while materials benefited from stronger metals pricing and a broader re-risking across global markets.
Energy lagged, which aligns with the pullback in crude and the removal of some of the war-driven premium.
Global indexes, risk appetite returns
Global equities reinforced the local rebound, with US markets pushing back toward record territory and Europe also delivering a solid week, which helped validate the idea that the worst of the recent geopolitical shock may have passed. It still feels fragile.
| Index | Weekly Move |
|---|---|
| S&P 500 | +4.5% |
| Dow Jones | +3.2% |
| Nasdaq | +4.7% |
| FTSE 100 | +0.3% |
| DAX | +0.4% |
| Nikkei 225 | +2.4% |
The key message is not the exact level of each index, but the shift in behaviour, markets are willing to re-engage with risk, but only while the macro backdrop remains stable.
ASX big movers, rotation still selective
At the stock level, the market continued to reward exposure to commodities, infrastructure and defensive earnings, while remaining cautious on high-beta and earnings-sensitive names.
Top 5 gainers:
| Rank | Code | Company | Close | Move |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | KAR | Karoon Energy | $1.34 | +7.63% |
| 2 | MYR | Myer Holdings | $0.67 | +7.14% |
| 3 | SMR | Stanmore Resources | $1.83 | +6.71% |
| 4 | PLS | Pilbara Minerals | $4.20 | +2.44% |
| 5 | NST | Northern Star Resources | $13.55 | +2.26% |
Top 5 losers:
| Rank | Code | Company | Close | Move |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SGR | Star Entertainment Group | $0.10 | -9.09% |
| 2 | NAN | Nanosonics | $4.46 | -8.04% |
| 3 | RIC | Ridley Corporation | $2.31 | -5.33% |
| 4 | MVF | Monash IVF | $0.72 | -5.26% |
| 5 | ZIP | Zip Co | $1.66 | -3.49% |
Karoon and Stanmore highlight continued demand for commodity exposure, while weakness in names like Star and Zip reinforces that investors are still cautious around leverage, earnings risk, and consumer sensitivity.
Commodities, oil cools but support remains
Commodity markets played a central role this week, particularly through the easing in oil prices, which removed a key source of inflation fear and allowed equity markets to reset.
That shift opened the door.
| Commodity | Weekly Move | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gold | +6.18% | Supported miners |
| Silver | +7.04% | Outperformed gold slightly |
| Copper | +2.07% | Materials support |
| Iron ore | +3.8% | Boosted miners |
| Brent crude | -7.5% | War premium eased |
| WTI crude | -9.6% | Energy lagged |
The key change is not that commodities became cheap, but that the panic premium came out of oil, allowing other parts of the market to reprice more constructively.
Currencies, AUD reflects the shift
Currency markets echoed the broader move, with the Australian dollar recovering as oil eased and global risk sentiment improved, even as the US dollar remained relatively firm overall.
It was a clean reaction. AUD strength reflected improved sentiment rather than a structural shift, while USD/JPY remained elevated, showing that underlying macro themes have not fully disappeared.
Market takeaway, relief is here, conviction still forming
This week felt like a classic relief rally, driven by positioning and a partial unwind of geopolitical risk rather than a full reset in the macro outlook.
It is not a new cycle yet. Banks, miners and cyclicals led the move, energy lagged as oil cooled, and the broader question now is whether this improvement can hold if headlines remain quiet, or whether markets slip back into volatility if risks re-emerge.
For investors, the message is straightforward, the market will move higher when pressure eases, but it is still selective, still reactive, and still far from fully confident.