
ASX flat despite RBA's shock move
The benchmark ASX 200 index closed at 8590.7 just 1.4 points higher, or 0.02 per cent, on a seesawing day of trading.
The broader All Ordinaries also eked out a tiny gain, up 2.30 points or 0.03 per cent.
The Australian dollar jumped on higher interest rates and is now buying 65.33 US cents.
On a mixed day of trading, just four sectors were higher, with seven finishing in the red. The gains were led by telecommunications, the major banks and consumer discretionary stocks. RBA trades flat despite the RBA holding interest rates. NewsWire / Damian Shaw Credit: News Corp Australia
Three of the big four banks finished higher with CBA gaining 0.83 per cent to close at $179.28, NAB gained 0.64 per cent to $39.29 and ANZ finished in the green up 0.27 per cent to $30.21.
Westpac was the outlier, slipping just 0.03 per cent to $33.47 to be the only major bank to end in the red.
Wesfarmers gained 0.53 per cent to $83.49, Aristocrat Leisure gained 0.30 per cent to $67.84 and Eagers Automotive jumped 0.64 per cent to $18.73.
Going against market expectations, the RBA held the official cash rate at 3.85 per cent, although left the door open for future rate cuts.
VanEck head of investments and capital markets Russel Chesler said markets seemed to be throwing caution to the wind with their expectations.
'A rate cut is generally good for markets, as it reduces the cost of capital and thus encourages business growth – particularly for small caps, which are typically more leveraged,' he said.
'The additional rate easing, while mild, also suggests business input costs should improve, which is beneficial for mid and small caps that tend to have lower pricing power.
'However, the tight labour market should not be overlooked, with wages continuing to put downward pressure on profits.' On a flat day of trading four of the 11 sectors finished in the green. Picture NewsWire/ Gaye Gerard. Credit: News Corp Australia
Australia's market followed a weak lead in from Wall Street overnight after US President Donald Trump began sending letters to key trading partners, including Japan and South Korea who will both face 25 per cent tariff rates.
In total 14 letters were sent with Mr Trump sharing screenshots of signed form letters dictating new tariff rates to the leaders of Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Kazakhstan, South Africa, Laos, Myanmar, Tunisia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Serbia, Cambodia and Thailand.
Capital.com senior financial market analyst Kyle Rodda called it a 'quick punch in the guts' as the July 9 US trade deal deadline approaches.
'Market participants were anticipating a flurry of trade deals with some trading partners and a handful of letters announcing new tariff rates on others,' he wrote in an economic note.
'So far, only the letters have been published, and their contents made investors' stomachs sink.'
In company news, shares in DigitalX soared 34.15 per cent to $0.11 after the digital asset manager announced a $20.7m strategic investment to expand its bitcoin-focused strategy.
Pizza maker Domino's also finished in the green up 2.39 per cent to $18.45 after broker Morgans revealed a buy rating for the business stating 'we think the risk reward looks attractive from here.'
It comes after shares have fallen by 47 per cent over the last 12 months, including a more than 11 per cent drop last week after chief executive Mark Van Dyck announced plans to leave his role just before Christmas.
Anti-drone technology company DroneShield also jumped 4.07 per cent to $2.56 after telling the market it had been awarded an $11.7m follow-on research and development contract by a Five Eyes Department of Defence.
This follows the completion of a $9.9m contract with the same defence customer back in July 2023.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
14 minutes ago
- West Australian
Hope for tariff carve-out wanes as Trump strikes deals
Australia's hopes for a total tariff exemption are dwindling as Donald Trump's deals with other nations lay bare the limits of trade negotiations. Since pushing his tariff deadline to August 1, the US president has struck trade agreements with Japan, and on Monday, the European Union. While the deals landed on tariffs lower than Mr Trump's initial threats, both were higher than the 10 per cent baseline levy imposed on Australian goods. No US trading partner has managed to completely dodge tariffs on their items. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Trade Minister Don Farrell have maintained Australian products should not be hit with any tariffs, but the latest deals show an exemption could be off the table. "Trump really does see tariffs as something that is good in themselves," University of Sydney US politics expert David Smith told AAP. "Even though there were a lot of hopes at the beginning of this process that countries could negotiate their way out of tariffs altogether - that's not really happening." Australia, like other nations, might instead have to pivot approaches and try to strategically position its industries within these deals. For example, the US pharmaceutical sector has long taken issue with Australia's drug subsidy scheme and urged the president to act. In early July, Mr Trump threatened a 200 per cent tariff on pharmaceuticals, which could be seen as a way for the US to chip away at the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme in exchange for a trade deal. Both of Australia's major parties have maintained the program is not up for negotiation. Instead, the federal government revealed it would lift restrictions on certain US beef imports. "Australia is thinking about other areas where we would be prepared to make concessions, because we were not going to be making concessions on (the PBS)," Associate Professor Smith said. Mr Albanese has maintained his government is engaging in Australia's national interest. While the government said its decision to lift restrictions followed a decade-long scientific review and noted the measure would not compromise biosecurity, the opposition and figures within the cattle industry have called for an independent examination of the issue. "If we have created a brand new threat, we should be very clear about that," Liberal senator Jane Hume told parliament.


Perth Now
14 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Hope for tariff carve-out wanes as Trump strikes deals
Australia's hopes for a total tariff exemption are dwindling as Donald Trump's deals with other nations lay bare the limits of trade negotiations. Since pushing his tariff deadline to August 1, the US president has struck trade agreements with Japan, and on Monday, the European Union. While the deals landed on tariffs lower than Mr Trump's initial threats, both were higher than the 10 per cent baseline levy imposed on Australian goods. No US trading partner has managed to completely dodge tariffs on their items. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Trade Minister Don Farrell have maintained Australian products should not be hit with any tariffs, but the latest deals show an exemption could be off the table. "Trump really does see tariffs as something that is good in themselves," University of Sydney US politics expert David Smith told AAP. "Even though there were a lot of hopes at the beginning of this process that countries could negotiate their way out of tariffs altogether - that's not really happening." Australia, like other nations, might instead have to pivot approaches and try to strategically position its industries within these deals. For example, the US pharmaceutical sector has long taken issue with Australia's drug subsidy scheme and urged the president to act. In early July, Mr Trump threatened a 200 per cent tariff on pharmaceuticals, which could be seen as a way for the US to chip away at the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme in exchange for a trade deal. Both of Australia's major parties have maintained the program is not up for negotiation. Instead, the federal government revealed it would lift restrictions on certain US beef imports. "Australia is thinking about other areas where we would be prepared to make concessions, because we were not going to be making concessions on (the PBS)," Associate Professor Smith said. Mr Albanese has maintained his government is engaging in Australia's national interest. While the government said its decision to lift restrictions followed a decade-long scientific review and noted the measure would not compromise biosecurity, the opposition and figures within the cattle industry have called for an independent examination of the issue. "If we have created a brand new threat, we should be very clear about that," Liberal senator Jane Hume told parliament.

AU Financial Review
44 minutes ago
- AU Financial Review
Trump flags new baseline tariff of 15 or 20pc
Washington | Australian exporters may face tariffs of 15 to 20 per cent at the United States border, with the Albanese government yet to strike a deal and US President Donald Trump flagging a new, higher baseline. Trump revealed the range for the new minimum tariff on Monday (Tuesday AEST) in a press conference in Turnberry, Scotland, where he met British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.