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ASX 200 Hovers Near Flat in Thin Trade as RBA Hawkish Signal and Weak U.S. Futures Weigh on Sentiment

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Australia Housing Market 2026: Two-Speed Boom Persists as Prices Hit

SYDNEY — Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX 200 was barely changed in afternoon trade Thursday, hovering just below the flatline as a hawkish signal from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s latest policy minutes, a sharp pullback in U.S. stock futures and ongoing weakness in the country’s building sector combined to keep investor appetite subdued heading into the long weekend.

The ASX 200 was trading around breakeven despite only three sectors trading in positive territory. The large end of town was holding up relatively well, but the smaller stocks were showing more weakness.

The index was at 8,719.1, down just 3.8 points, or 0.04%, as of 3:21 p.m. AEST, recovering modestly from a session low of 8,711.40 reached earlier in the afternoon. The tightly rangebound session came after Wednesday’s more significant decline, when the benchmark fell 56 points, or 0.6%, to close at 8,723 on the first day of the new financial year, extending a two-day losing streak that began Tuesday when the index slipped 45 points, or 0.5%, to 8,779.

Australia’s ASX 200 dipped 56 points or 0.6% to finish at 8,723 on Wednesday, the first day of the new financial year. Markets extended declines from the day before amid a sharp drop in U.S. stock futures following strong gains on Wall Street during H1 of 2026, supported by a continued surge in chip stocks. Caution lingered ahead of May trade data, due Thursday, after April exports outpaced imports to deliver a modest surplus. Meanwhile, building permits dropped for a third month in May, marking the fourth contraction this year.

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The building permits data released Wednesday added to a picture of a domestic economy under the strain of elevated borrowing costs. The Reserve Bank of Australia raised its cash rate three times in 2026, in February, March and May, lifting it to 4.35% before pausing in June. The minutes from that June meeting, released Tuesday, rattled markets by signaling further tightening remains on the table.

In its June meeting minutes, the central bank signalled further tightening remains possible after three hikes since January, citing rising Q2 cost pressures. Most sectors fell, led by commercial services, financials, logistics, and consumer names. The big four banks lost 1.5%–2.5%, while Greatland Resources (-4.7%), Coles Group (-4.2%), and Xero (-2.8%) slipped.

Thursday’s session has been comparatively calmer, with only marginal moves across most major index constituents as investors awaited May trade data due during the session, the next concrete data point that could influence expectations about the RBA’s path on interest rates.

Among individual market movers Thursday, gold miner Northern Star attracted attention after the company posted June-quarter results and announced a significant leadership change. The market responded positively to the dual news of a new chief executive and a June quarter that lifted full-year gold sales above revised guidance. Shares were up 4.2% to $19.59, but still down roughly 2% in the past week amid soft gold prices. Northern Star appointed Glencore’s Suresh Vadnagra as Managing Director and CEO from October 5, with the KCGM Mill Expansion Stage I on track for commissioning in early FY27, lifting throughput from 13 million tonnes per annum to 27 million tonnes per annum.

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In a separate, high-profile corporate disclosure, Ventia Services Group CEO Dean Banks disclosed the sale of 2.0 million shares, reducing his beneficial holding by 40% to 3.0 million shares. Last month, Ventia appointed Mark Ralston as new CEO from September 1, 2026. Ventia shares have dipped 10% from their June 23 record highs, but are still up 2% year-to-date.

Security technology company Integrated Managed Group was another notable Thursday mover. The company struck a binding agreement to acquire ADT’s UK residential security business for £180 million, comprising £155 million cash and £25 million in IMG shares issued to Johnson Controls International. The deal adds $12.5 million per month in recurring revenue, up 205%, from more than 160,000 direct customers, and is expected to lift pro forma annualised EBITDA by around 300% to $130 million, against FY26 guidance of $43 million to $47 million.

Offshore, an eye-catching development in Korean currency markets added to the broader financial backdrop for Thursday’s Australian trading session. South Korea’s top finance official flagged a clear shift in overseas investor interest as the Korean won prepares to move to round-the-clock trading from July 6. Second Vice Finance Minister Huh Chang said 2026 investor roadshows in Hong Kong and Singapore pointed to significant growth in overseas interest, with Korea’s capital markets now seen as far more attractive. The government said it has sufficient capacity to steady the currency and will act if the won swings sharply from fundamentals, with the currency near its weakest since 2009.

Global commodity markets have also been a source of mixed signals for the Australian bourse. Oil fell 1.83% to $68.23 per barrel, while gold climbed 1.15% to $4,085.00. The divergence between a softening oil price and a rebounding gold price has created crosscurrents within the ASX’s large resources sector, supporting gold miners like Northern Star on one hand while applying modest pressure on energy names including Ampol and Whitehaven Coal.

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The broader context of Thursday’s near-flat session is a market digesting an unusually eventful new financial year opening. The 2024-25 and 2025-26 Australian financial years produced sharply contrasting performance, with the recent year returning roughly 6.3% on a total return basis including dividends despite the late-year rate hike headwinds. Despite the pullback in recent sessions, the market logged a third straight monthly gain in June, up 0.5%, and around 3.5% for the quarter, underpinned by resilient spending, stronger jobs, and continued factory growth.

The ASX website itself flagged scheduled maintenance disruptions in a notice posted Thursday, with the Investor Portal set to be unavailable due to scheduled maintenance on Friday, July 3, from 7:30 p.m. to Saturday, July 4, at 6 p.m. AEST.

With U.S. markets closing early ahead of the Fourth of July holiday weekend and the critical June nonfarm payrolls report due from Washington on Thursday evening Australian time, traders appear content to keep positions light rather than make directional bets ahead of data that could meaningfully shift expectations around the U.S. Federal Reserve’s rate trajectory and, by extension, the Australian dollar and broader risk appetite across Asia-Pacific markets heading into the new week.

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Hindustan Zinc shares jump 3%. Here are 3 reasons behind today’s shine

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Hindustan Zinc shares jump 3%. Here are 3 reasons behind today's shine
The shares of Hindustan Zinc jumped more than 3% on Friday, extending sharp gains for the second consecutive session and adding around Rs 6,815 crore to its market value as soaring silver prices, weaker dollar, and Q1 business update boosted market sentiment.

Hindustan Zinc shares jumped over 3% to trade at Rs 544.80 apiece on NSE on Friday morning. This is the highest level seen by the stock in more than a week.

Dollar tumbles

The US dollar slipped towards what may be its biggest weekly loss since April on Friday after weaker-than-expected nonfarm payrolls and private payrolls data tempered concerns around inflation and higher-for-longer interest rates. The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro, was roughly 0.2% lower at 100.70 after a 0.5% dip on Thursday. It is now down 0.6% for the week, the biggest weekly drop since early April.

A weaker dollar supports metal prices, boosting metal stocks. As a result, the sharp surge in Hindustan Zinc’s share price today comes amid an overall uptrend in metal stocks, tracking the drop in the dollar’s strength. The Nifty Metal index gained around 1% to 12,605.80, as seen at around 11 am.

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Silver prices soar

As a result of the cooling expectations of the Fed’s rate hike, silver prices surged. Silver futures with September expiry on the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) jumped nearly Rs 5,000 per kilogram (over 2%) to cross Rs 2.38 lakh per kilogram.

Silver futures with December expiry meanwhile gained 2.5% to Rs 2,44,678 per kg. Hindustan Zinc is India’s largest producer of zinc, lead, and silver. The company operates fully integrated mining and smelting facilities across Rajasthan and Uttarakhand. It accounts for nearly 80% of India’s primary zinc production and is among the world’s top 10 silver producers. The company’s operations include underground mines, captive power plants, and smelting facilities, ensuring self-sufficiency in raw materials and energy.

Hindustan Zinc’s Q1 business update

Hindustan Zinc on Thursday released its provisional business update for the April-June quarter of FY27. The Vedanta Group company reported its highest-ever first quarter mined metal production for the fifth consecutive year at 268 kt, driven mainly by better grades.

Its saleable metal output increased 4% to 260 kilo tonnes, while refined zinc output increased 6% to 213 kt during the quarter under review.

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Also Read | Technology to be central to Hindustan Zinc’s next phase of growth
Hindustan Zinc’s silver output, however, declined 0.4% to 149 tonnes during the first quarter of FY27. Wind power meanwhile fell 1% to 133 million units during the quarter.

Hindustan Zinc share price

Hindustan Zinc shares have gained more than 4% in one week but declined around 12% in one month. The stock has overall gained 21% in one year.In the longer term, the shares of Hindustan Zinc have delivered 74% returns over three years and 59% in five years. The company currently has a market capitalisation of nearly Rs 2.28 lakh crore.

Also Read | Govt lines up PSU stake sales to cushion budget hit from oil; LIC, Hindustan Zinc among 8 companies in focus

(With inputs from agencies)

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Main Roads WA secures $22.7m Naval Base site ahead of Westport

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Main Roads WA secures $22.7m Naval Base site ahead of Westport

The state’s roads manager continues to buy up land in Naval Base after the state and federal governments’ $1.1 billion road infrastructure investment to pave the way for Westport.

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Ralliant: Strong Spin-Off Momentum, But The Multiple Already Reflects It (NYSE:RAL)

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Ralliant: Strong Spin-Off Momentum, But The Multiple Already Reflects It (NYSE:RAL)

This article was written by

I am a part-time investor interested in equities, ETFs, macro, and emerging markets.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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ExxonMobil: Valuation Is Attractive With Overlooked Market Opportunities (Upgrade) (XOM)

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ExxonMobil: Valuation Is Attractive With Overlooked Market Opportunities (Upgrade) (XOM)

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I have been working in the logistics sector for almost two decades. I have been into stock investing and macroeconomic analysis for almost a decade. Currently, I focus on ASEAN and NYSE/NASDAQ Stocks, particularly in banks, telco, logistics, and hotels. Since 2014, I have been trading on the PH stock market. I focus on banking, telco, and retail sectors. A colleague encouraged me to engage in the stock market as part of my portfolio diversification instead of putting all my savings in banks and properties. That was also the year when insurance companies became very popular in the PH. Initially, I invested in popular blue-chip companies. Now, I have investments across different industries and market cap sizes. There are stocks I hold for my retirement, while others are purely for trading profits. In 2020, I also entered the US Market. It was about a year after I discovered Seeking Alpha. Originally, I was using the trading account of NY CA-based cousin. Somehow, I acted like his personal broker. That made me more aware of the US market before deciding to open my own account. I decided to write for Seeking Alpha to share and gain more knowledge since I have been trading on the US market for only four years. Like in the ASEAN market, I have holdings in US banks, hotels, shipping, and logistics companies. I discovered it in 2018. Since then, I have been using the analyses here to compare them to the ones I’m doing in the PH Market.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of XOM either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Bumble: No End In Sight To Paid User Churn (NASDAQ:BMBL)

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Bumble: Leverage And AI Reset Makes It A Speculative Hold (NASDAQ:BMBL)

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With combined experience of covering technology companies on Wall Street and working in Silicon Valley, and serving as an outside adviser to several seed-round startups, Gary Alexander has exposure to many of the themes shaping the industry today. He has been a regular contributor on Seeking Alpha since 2017. He has been quoted in many web publications and his articles are syndicated to company pages in popular trading apps like Robinhood.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Sumitomo Chemical shares soar 11%, record biggest single-day surge in nearly 2 years. Here’s why

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Sumitomo Chemical shares soar 11%, record biggest single-day surge in nearly 2 years. Here’s why
The shares of Sumitomo Chemical India rallied sharply by around 11% on Friday, with the stock on track to record its biggest single-day surge since September 2024, following a key partnership by its parent company’s Korean subsidiary and heavy trading volumes.

The shares of the company, which is associated with agrochemicals, biopesticides, feed activities, household insecticides and animal nutrition sectors, soared to Rs 488.65 apiece on the NSE on Friday.

Why are Sumitomo Chemical India shares up today?

The sharp surge in Sumitomo Chemical India shares comes after its Japanese parent, Sumitomo Chemical, said that its Korean subsidiary, Dongwoo Fine-Chem, has signed a joint venture agreement with Samsung Electro-Mechanics to establish a joint venture company to engage in the business of glass core substrates for advanced semiconductor packages.

“In recent years, driven by the growing adoption of generative AI, expanding data centre investments, and rising demand for high-performance computing, semiconductors have been required to achieve even greater integration and lower power consumption. As a result, semiconductor package substrates are also needed to support further increases in size and density. This has led to glass core substrates garnering attention as a technology that supports next-generation semiconductor packages,” the company said in a press release.

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Also read: Gujarat accelerates semiconductor ambitions as Sumitomo Chemical weighs deeper investment

Glass core substrates are next-generation semiconductor package substrates which are characterised by excellent rigidity, dimensional stability, low warpage and low thermal expansion, which contribute to larger package sizes, improved reliability and higher-density wiring, the company said. “In particular, AI-related semiconductors are expected to see even greater package enlargement and higher density going forward, and glass core substrates, which are a promising option well suited to these requirements, are expected to experience a full-scale market launch,” it added.
Sumitomo Chemical said that the new company to be developed as part of the joint venture is scheduled to establish a supply system by the second half of the fiscal year 2027 with a share capital of KRW 482,100 million.

Sumitomo Chemical India stock performance

The sharp surge in Sumitomo Chemical India’s share price also comes amid heavy volumes. More than 123 lakh shares of the company worth around Rs 589 crore have already been traded, as per data on the NSE at 12.45 pm.
The stock has gained around 10% over the past week but is down nearly 1% over the past month. It is up about 2% so far in 2026. Over the longer term, it has fallen 9% in the past year, while rising 10% over three years and 24% over five years. The company’s current market capitalisation is nearly Rs 23,747 crore.

Also read:
Hitachi Energy, GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, other power equipment stocks crash up to 10%. Here’s why

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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Aussie shares rally for best day in three weeks

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Aussie shares rally for best day in three weeks

The Australian share market has enjoyed its best day in three weeks, thanks in part to strong gains by goldminers following lacklustre US employment data.

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Rates Spark: Resumed Steepening Impulse

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Rates Spark: Resumed Steepening Impulse

Rates Spark: Resumed Steepening Impulse

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Welsh Goverment needs to talk more to entrepreneurs and not just business organisations

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For too long, Welsh economic policy has been dominated by the politics of representation rather than the discipline of delivery

The musical Hamilton.(Image: Danny Kaan)

In the musical Hamilton, Lin-Manuel Miranda gives Aaron Burr a whole song built on a single frustration: that the bargains that shape a nation are struck not in public but behind closed doors, and among a handful of people who have been granted a seat at the table.

Burr’s complaint is being left outside, desperate to be in the “room where it happens” and it is one of the oldest truths in politics, namely that influence flows to whoever is in that room, and that everyone else can only guess at what was decided on their behalf. But the more interesting question is rarely who is in the room but whether the right people are in it at all.

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For 27 years, Wales has had devolution, its own economic strategies, advisory groups, and endless consultations. Yet throughout that period, one remarkably consistent feature of Welsh economic policy has been that the same familiar business organisations have been invited into the same rooms as ministers to offer broadly similar views on the same persistent problems.

A range of business membership bodies, employer groups and professional networks have all played a part in that process, and it would be unfair to suggest that they have not done useful work, because many of them represent genuine concerns, and act as a bridge between ministers, officials and the business community at times when government needs to hear directly from those operating in the real economy.

But after more than a quarter of a century of devolved economic policy, and after repeated strategies promising stronger growth, better productivity and a more resilient private sector, we have a right to ask some uncomfortable questions about the system that has been created and the voices we have allowed to dominate it.

This is not a criticism of any one organisation, nor is it an argument that representative bodies have no place in policymaking, as they clearly do. The issue is more fundamental, as representation is not the same as leadership and being present in the machinery of government is not the same as changing the economy’s performance outside it.

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The danger for Wales is that we have spent too long assuming that, because business organisations have been invited to sit on a panel to comment on economic policy, business itself has therefore been properly involved in reshaping the country’s future.

The truth is far more complicated, and many representative organisations are, by their nature, cautious institutions as they must reflect a wide range of interests, avoid alienating too many of their members, and usually gravitate towards the lowest common denominator rather than the sharpest edge of economic change.

Indeed, the very characteristics that make these organisations acceptable to government can also make them insufficient for the task now facing Wales.

They are respectable, familiar, structured and consultative, but those are not always the qualities needed to challenge the economic challenges facing Wales, and it is likely that most of the same bodies that have supported the Labour Government for more than a quarter of a century will be sitting down with the new Plaid Cymru Enterprise Minister over the next few weeks to say much of the same things they did to his predecessor.

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Some will argue that this is the realpolitik of doing business in Wales, but what has it achieved? Where are the organisations prepared to push harder, speak more directly, and challenge the comfortable assumptions that have underpinned economic policy for too long?

Where are those who, after decades of public investment in skills, infrastructure, innovation and enterprise support, question why we still do not have enough firms capable of competing seriously in the UK and global markets?

Indeed, the question is not whether business should continue to have a voice – of course it should – but it is less likely to represent the founders still outside the system, especially the disruptive entrepreneurs who should be at the heart of any serious economic development strategy.

And yet it is precisely those people and those businesses that Wales needs far more of, and the next phase of Welsh economic development cannot be built solely around organisations whose primary function is to explain the business concerns of a small number of firms to government.

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For too long, Welsh economic policy has been dominated by the politics of representation rather than the discipline of delivery, and it seems very few people have been asking serious questions about why Wales still produces too few high-growth firms, why ambitious founders often look outside Wales for finance and networks, and why public investment still too often fails to generate lasting private-sector momentum.

This is not an argument for excluding existing organisations from the debate but one for rebalancing it, because whilst the established representative bodies have knowledge, members and experience, Wales also needs those business voices that are constructive but uncomfortable, collaborative but demanding, practical but ambitious.

So here is a simple test of whether anything has genuinely changed under a new government. Rather than just having talks with the usual bodies, the minister could, within his first hundred days, bring together the founders and chief executives of Wales’s most 100 innovative and entrepreneurial companies for a summit built around one question: what would it take to double the number of Welsh businesses scaling past £10m over the next four years? Not a consultation but a working session of the people building real growth, many of whom have never once been invited into the room.

Given the way that the civil service in Wales seems terrified of anyone with a radical idea, I expect the comfortable consensus to continue as it always has, with the same familiar faces sitting around the same table, but I would be delighted to be proved wrong, and it would be a truly new start for devolution in Wales if those in power were willing to fill the room where it happens with the incredible businesses that are building the country’s future.

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Kymera: Building Toward A Defining 2H26 Moment

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Kymera: Building Toward A Defining 2H26 Moment

Kymera: Building Toward A Defining 2H26 Moment

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