Australia shares kick off 2026 higher as banks lead gains

Australian shares snap four sessions of losses

Banks rebound, ‘Big Four’ up 0.4% to 0.8%

NST sheds 10% on production forecast cut

By Jasmeen Ara Islam Shaikh

Jan 2 (Reuters) – Australian shares snapped a four-day losing streak on Friday, as investors returned to bellwether financials and lifted the index to a one-week closing high, while a selloff in miners capped gains in a thin session.

The S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.2% to 8,727.8 points, its highest close since December 24. Turnover was about 40% of the 30-day average, with few traders returning to markets after the New Year holiday.

The benchmark gained 6.8% in 2025, marking a third straight annual advance but lagging major global peers such as Japan’s Nikkei and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng.

Financials added 0.4% on the day, marking their steepest rise in over a week. The ‘Big Four’ banks rose between 0.4% and 0.8%.

When uncertainty eases, even slightly, money tends to flow first into the big banks, said Greg Boland, market strategy consultant at Moomoo Securities Australia.

“They benefit from stabilizing rate expectations, resilient balance sheets, and the fact that investors see them as reliable dividend engines in a world still negotiating what ‘normal’ really looks like.”

With a hawkish pivot to the Reserve Bank of Australia’s outlook on interest rates in late 2025, markets are anticipating a higher-for-longer rate environment to prevail, generally a boon for banks but with a touch of lingering credit-risk.

Investors now look forward to inflation data due January 7 and labor data later this month to better assess the central bank’s course of action at the February policy meeting.

Gold miners fell 1.5% weighed down by Northern Star Resources as the mining giant downgraded its annual production forecast making it the top laggard on the benchmark. The broader mining gauge, which constitutes gold miners, ended flat.

Meanwhile, Nickel Industries surged to a one-year high after Sphere Corp took a 10% stake in its Indonesia project.

New Zealand markets were closed for a public holiday. The country’s S&P/NZX 50 index rose 3.3% in 2025, marking its third straight annual gain. (Reporting by Jasmeen Ara Shaikh in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala)

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