The Australian sharemarket finished the week on a strong note, with the ASX 200 jumping 1.37% on Friday to close at 8,844. It was one of the market’s strongest daily performances in several weeks, driven by a sharp rally in gold miners and renewed strength across selected resource names.
Despite Friday’s surge, the broader trading week was less convincing. The ASX drifted lower through the middle of the week before recovering much of those losses in the final session. On a four-session basis the index finished marginally lower, although the broader trend remained constructive, with the ASX 200 rising 1.31% over the past month and 2.29% over the past year.
Investor sentiment improved as stronger commodity prices combined with a record close for the Dow Jones and US labour market data that eased concerns about further near-term interest rate increases. That combination encouraged investors back into cyclical sectors after several cautious trading sessions.
Market overview
Friday’s rally masked what had otherwise been a relatively subdued week for Australian equities. The market opened the week positively before weaker sentiment surrounding interest rates, economic growth and global technology stocks pushed the index lower through Tuesday and Wednesday.
Everything changed on Friday. A powerful move higher in gold prices triggered widespread buying across Australia’s precious metals sector, while firmer base metal prices added further support for resource stocks. The improvement in global risk sentiment also helped lift broader market confidence, allowing investors to rotate back into cyclical sectors after spending much of the week favouring defensive positions.
Although the weekly result was modest, Friday demonstrated how quickly market leadership can change when macroeconomic concerns begin to ease and commodity markets regain momentum.
Big ticket themes
Gold miners led the market higher
Gold was easily the week’s dominant investment theme. Higher bullion prices fuelled a sharp rally across Australia’s listed gold producers, with Catalyst Metals, Genesis Minerals and Northern Star all recording double-digit gains during Friday’s session.
The strength extended beyond individual companies. Investors rotated back into hard-asset exposure as improving precious metals prices and firmer base metals strengthened confidence across the broader resources sector.
The rally also highlighted how quickly sentiment can shift within Australian equities. Materials had lagged for much of the week before becoming the market’s strongest contributor during Friday’s recovery.
Rate expectations became less of a headwind
Interest rates remained firmly in focus.
US employment data helped calm concerns that the Federal Reserve would need to tighten monetary policy again in the near term. That outcome supported a record close for the Dow Jones and improved broader global risk appetite.
Australian investors remained more cautious. Markets continue balancing resilient economic data against persistent inflation, leaving expectations for future Reserve Bank decisions finely balanced.
Technology paused after a strong run
Technology stocks played a much smaller role this week.
Global investors continued taking profits across several AI and semiconductor names after an extended rally, limiting gains across broader technology indices. The S&P 500 finished little changed despite stronger performances elsewhere, reflecting a rotation away from some of the market’s highest-performing growth stocks.
For the ASX, that meant resources rather than technology provided the leadership investors had been waiting for.
Australian indices
| Date | Index Level | Daily % Change |
|---|---|---|
| Mon 29 Jun | 8,823.40 | +0.68% |
| Tue 30 Jun | 8,778.70 | -0.51% |
| Wed 1 Jul | 8,722.90 | -0.64% |
| Thu 2 Jul | 8,724.50 | +0.02% |
| Fri 3 Jul | 8,844.00 | +1.37% |
The week began with encouraging momentum before weaker sentiment weighed on the market through the middle of the week. Friday’s rally recovered much of those earlier losses and left investors with a far more positive finish than many expected only 24 hours earlier.
Australian sectors
| Sector | Index Level | Weekly % Change |
|---|---|---|
| S&P/ASX 200 | 8,764.20 | -0.73% |
| Communication Services | 1,617.20 | -1.22% |
| Consumer Discretionary | 3,966.80 | +3.61% |
| Consumer Staples | 13,362.40 | +3.26% |
| Energy | 9,387.70 | -4.13% |
| Financials | 9,241.00 | -0.02% |
| Health Care | 25,577.10 | +1.64% |
| Industrials | 8,559.20 | +1.31% |
| Information Technology | 1,744.50 | -5.19% |
| Materials | 23,569.90 | -4.06% |
| Real Estate (ex-REIT) | 3,769.10 | +1.62% |
| Utilities | 9,897.90 | +2.42% |
| A-REITs | 1,751.70 | +1.68% |
Sector leadership remained defensive for much of the week. Consumer staples, utilities and A-REITs continued outperforming as investors favoured more predictable earnings while uncertainty around interest rates persisted.
Friday’s trading session shifted that narrative.
The rebound in gold miners dramatically improved sentiment across materials, although the sector still finished well behind its recent highs after several weaker sessions earlier in the week. Technology remained under pressure as global investors reduced exposure to high-growth names, while financials delivered another relatively stable week despite ongoing uncertainty around interest rates.
Global equities
| Index | Level | Daily % Change |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 | 7,483.24 | 0.00% |
| Dow Jones | 52,900.07 | +1.14% |
| Nikkei 225 | 69,744.07 | +1.47% |
| Hang Seng | 23,350.03 | +1.28% |
| DAX | 25,779.31 | +0.78% |
| FTSE 100 | 10,679.03 | +0.25% |
Global markets finished the week with solid gains.
The Dow Jones reached another record high as investors welcomed US employment data that reduced immediate concerns around additional Federal Reserve tightening. Asian and European markets also strengthened, supported by improving risk sentiment and firmer commodity prices.
The notable exception was the S&P 500, which finished broadly unchanged as weakness across several large technology stocks offset gains elsewhere in the market.
Commodities
| Commodity | Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude (Aug) | US$69.23/bbl | Oil stabilised in the high US$60s |
| Brent Crude (Aug) | US$71.99/bbl | Traded slightly above WTI |
| Gold (Comex Aug) | US$4,096.30/oz | Continued rally supported miners |
| Spot Gold | US$4,088.74/oz | Closely tracked futures higher |
| Silver (Comex Sep) | US$59.67/oz | Strength across precious metals |
| Copper (Comex Sep) | 620.70 US¢/lb | Firm industrial demand supported prices |
| Corn (Dec) | 441.50 US¢/bu | Relatively unchanged |
| Wheat (Sep) | 589.75 US¢/bu | Remained moderately elevated |
Gold dominated commodity markets and became the biggest driver of Australian equities on Friday. Higher bullion prices fuelled a broad rally across gold producers, with investors quickly rotating back into the sector after several quieter sessions.
Copper also remained well supported, reinforcing confidence in the broader resources complex. Oil traded within a relatively narrow range throughout the week, providing little direction for local energy producers as traders weighed geopolitical risks against softer demand expectations.
Top 5 ASX Gainers
| Rank | Company | Ticker | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Catalyst Metals | CYL | +19.18% |
| 2 | Genesis Minerals | GMD | +16.70% |
| 3 | Northern Star Resources | NST | +11.75% |
| 4 | Perseus Mining | PRU | +9.0% |
| 5 | Gold Road Resources | GOR | +8% |
Friday’s leaderboard belonged almost entirely to gold miners. Rising bullion prices, stronger investor confidence and renewed demand for defensive hard assets combined to drive sharp gains across the sector. The breadth of buying suggested investors were positioning for further strength rather than simply covering short positions.
Top 3 ASX Losers
| Rank | Company | Ticker | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PEXA Group | PXA | -21.29% |
| 2 | Suncorp Group | SUN | -3.72% |
| 3 | Fortescue Metals | FMG | -3.16% |
PEXA Group suffered the session’s steepest decline after a draft determination from the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (IPART) proposed reducing the company’s regulated revenue, wiping more than 20% from its market value. Suncorp and Fortescue also finished lower, although for different reasons. Suncorp faced selling pressure following recent strength, while Fortescue underperformed despite improving sentiment across the broader resources sector, highlighting the divergence between iron ore producers and gold miners.
Business and macro news
The week’s biggest corporate story centred on PEXA. A draft recommendation from the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal proposed lowering the company’s allowable regulated revenue, raising fresh questions about future earnings growth and the long-term economics of its digital conveyancing platform. The market responded swiftly, sending the shares sharply lower and reinforcing how quickly regulatory developments can reshape investor expectations.
Elsewhere, attention returned to the resources sector. Gold prices strengthened throughout the week, providing a meaningful tailwind for Australia’s major gold producers and helping offset ongoing weakness across other commodity markets. The rally also demonstrated that investors remain willing to rotate aggressively into sectors supported by improving macro conditions.
Internationally, US employment data proved to be the week’s defining macro event. The report struck a balance that markets welcomed. Employment remained resilient enough to support confidence in the US economy, while avoiding the kind of overheating that might have forced the Federal Reserve into another immediate rate increase. That outcome lifted global risk appetite, pushed the Dow Jones to another record close and helped improve sentiment across international equity markets.
Australian investors continue facing a more balanced outlook. Inflation remains above the Reserve Bank’s preferred range, while labour market conditions remain relatively firm. That leaves interest rate expectations finely balanced heading into the next round of economic data, with investors continuing to assess whether policy easing or further tightening becomes the more likely path.
What mattered
Friday’s rally ultimately defined the week.
The ASX 200 climbed 1.37% to finish at 8,844, recovering much of the weakness seen earlier in the week as gold miners delivered some of the market’s strongest gains this year. Global markets also provided a supportive backdrop, with the Dow Jones, Nikkei, DAX and Hang Seng all finishing higher while the S&P 500 consolidated after its recent technology-led rally.
The week’s biggest lesson was not simply that gold rallied.
It was that investors continue responding quickly when macro uncertainty begins to ease and commodity markets regain momentum. Leadership rotated away from defensives and back towards selected resource companies, showing that capital remains available for sectors supported by improving fundamentals.
Looking ahead, investors should continue watching three key drivers: commodity prices, central bank expectations and the durability of global economic growth. Those themes are likely to remain the primary forces shaping Australian equities throughout the second half of the year.