Starting Point
Tuesday, 14 July 2026
as of 7:15am AEST
Markets at a glance
as of Tuesday, 14 July 2026, 7:15am AEST
S&P 500
7,515
-0.8%
ASX 200
8,808
US 10y
4.61%
+4 bp
AUD/USD
0.6920
-0.3%
Brent
$83.18
+9.4%
Bitcoin
$62,033
-2.7%
Comment

Good morning. Wall Street fell overnight after President Donald Trump said the United States was reinstating a blockade on Iranian shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and would charge 20 per cent on cargo passing through it. Oil jumped, with Brent up 9.4 per cent to US$83.18 a barrel and WTI up 9.2 per cent to US$78.00. The S&P 500 closed down 0.8 per cent at 7,515 and the Nasdaq fell 1.6 per cent to 25,873, dragged by a semiconductor sell-off that took Micron down about 4 per cent and the US-listed shares of SK Hynix down about 9 per cent. Treasuries sold off and the US dollar rose: the 10-year yield added 4 basis points to 4.61 per cent, the 2-year 5 basis points to 4.21 per cent, and the dollar index gained 0.3 per cent to 101.29.

The move in rates owed as much to the Federal Reserve as to oil. Governor Christopher Waller said that if core inflation runs hot again this week the board will need to consider tightening, noting core PCE inflation has risen from 3.0 per cent in December 2025 to 3.4 per cent in May. Futures now imply about a 46 per cent chance of a rate rise at the 29 July meeting, and the June CPI print lands tonight AEST. Gold fell 2.3 per cent to US$4,009 an ounce as those higher-rate expectations outweighed the geopolitical bid, and the VIX rose 14.2 per cent to 17.16.

The local corporate calendar was quiet ahead of August reporting, with BHP softer on looming industrial action at Port Hedland and AGL Energy cut to underperform by Macquarie. The larger developments were offshore: Shell agreed to sell its Indian renewables arm for US$1.8bn, Williams took a US$5.34bn investment from a Blackstone-led group, Volkswagen flagged up to 100,000 job cuts, and 12 US states sued to block the US$111bn Paramount and Warner Bros Discovery merger. Five of America's biggest banks, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs, report second-quarter results before the US open.

Markets by region
Australia

The ASX 200 finished the prior session little changed at 8,808, up 2.5 points, with strength in the banks and Wesfarmers (+1.8 per cent) offsetting falls in the miners. Lithium and uranium names led the declines, with Pilbara Minerals down 3.2 per cent, Liontown down 4.4 per cent, Boss Energy down 3.7 per cent and Paladin down 3.7 per cent, while the gold sub-index eased 1.9 per cent. BHP was softer on looming industrial action at Port Hedland; Woodside rose 3.34 per cent as energy names tracked the oil surge. The Australian dollar was down 0.3 per cent at US69.20 cents and the 10-year bond yield rose 6 basis points to 4.89 per cent.

Market Index
United States

The S&P 500 closed down 0.8 per cent at 7,515 and the Nasdaq fell 1.6 per cent to 25,873, while the Dow slipped 0.3 per cent to 52,499. Oil and gas names gained as Brent rose 9.4 per cent, but semiconductors fell hard, with Micron down about 4 per cent, SK Hynix's US shares down about 9 per cent and Sandisk down about 12 per cent. Treasury yields rose after Fed governor Christopher Waller flagged a possible July rate rise, the 10-year up 4 basis points to 4.61 per cent and the 2-year up 5 basis points to 4.21 per cent, with the dollar index up 0.3 per cent to 101.29 and gold down 2.3 per cent to US$4,009.

Europe

The STOXX 600 closed little changed at 641 and the DAX rose 0.2 per cent to 25,114, while the FTSE 100 was flat at 10,498. Energy majors led on the oil move, with BP up 2.6 per cent, Eni up 2.5 per cent and TotalEnergies up 1.9 per cent, while technology names lagged, ASML down about 2 per cent and Infineon down about 3 per cent. Stocks and bonds fell together as mounting US-Iran tensions weighed on sentiment across the region.

Asia

The Nikkei 225 fell 1.9 per cent to 67,243 and the Shanghai Composite dropped 2.1 per cent to 3,914, its weakest in about a month, while the Hang Seng edged up 0.2 per cent to 24,214. Chinese losses were broad, with the defence and rare-earth sub-indices down about 5 per cent and the semiconductor index off nearly 2 per cent as Hormuz tensions sapped risk appetite. The yen sat near a 40-year low, with USD/JPY at 162.39, keeping traders alert to possible intervention from Tokyo.

arcpoint markets data
Macro
Australia
The RBA cash rate remains at 4.35 per cent and 30-day interbank futures price no cut before 2027.

The 10-year Australian government bond yield rose 6 basis points to 4.89 per cent, up 9 basis points over the week and 63 basis points over the past year, tracking the overnight back-up in US yields.

arcpoint markets data

The US dollar index rose 0.3 per cent to 101.29 on the Hormuz oil surge and Waller's hawkish remarks, while USD/JPY held at 162.39, near a 40-year low for the yen.

The case extends the political focus on Big Four and adviser governance that began with the PwC tax-leaks scandal; separately, the AFR reported super-fund service failures prompting calls for government intervention.

The benchmark 62 per cent iron ore price held at US$98.72 a tonne, up 0.2 per cent on the day and 2.0 per cent over the past year.

The steady bulk price is a backdrop for the large producers BHP, Rio Tinto and Fortescue.

arcpoint markets data
Deloitte Access Economics cut its forecast for Australian real GDP growth in 2026-27 to 1.3 per cent, from 1.9 per cent.

The downgrade points to sub-2 per cent growth persisting as higher rates and weak confidence weigh on activity.

Deloitte Access Economics
ASIC and APRA announced changes to the Financial Accountability Regime to reduce administrative burden, easing competence-evidence and reporting requirements from October 2026.

The reforms streamline responsible-manager licensing for FAR entities and pare back fit-and-proper reporting.

ASIC
The AFR reported investors are piling into income-focused ETFs to shelter from proposed tax changes.

The shift points to changing flows in the domestic managed-fund and ETF market ahead of the tax debate.

Australian Financial Review
Anthropic's roughly $21bn Australian data-centre plan hinges on copyright clarity, with the prime minister in no hurry to legislate, the AFR reported.

The stand-off links the local AI build-out to unresolved copyright policy.

Australian Financial Review
Global

Futures now imply about a 46 per cent chance of a 25 basis-point rise at the 29 July meeting; the US 2-year yield rose 5 basis points to 4.21 per cent and the 10-year 4 basis points to 4.61 per cent, with the June CPI print due tonight AEST.

Ship traffic through the strait fell about 60 per cent on Sunday from a week earlier, according to Kpler data, and Brent is now up 15.5 per cent over five sessions.

Gold gave back 3.5 per cent over five sessions as the prospect of higher US rates outweighed the safe-haven bid from the Middle East escalation.

The print, lifted by food and the oil move, complicates the Reserve Bank of India's room to ease.

The US 2-year Treasury yield rose 5 basis points to 4.21 per cent, up 35 basis points over the past year.

The move reflected building bets on a July Fed rate rise ahead of tonight's CPI.

arcpoint markets data
The VIX jumped 14.2 per cent to 17.16 as equities sold off.

The gauge is up 10.2 per cent over five sessions, though still historically low.

arcpoint markets data
Copper rose 0.7 per cent to US$13,836 a tonne, up 12.8 per cent over the past year.

Industrial metals held up better than gold through the risk-off session.

arcpoint markets data
Bitcoin fell 2.7 per cent to US$62,033 and Ether 2.5 per cent to US$1,761.

Both slid with the broader risk-off tone, leaving Bitcoin down 47.9 per cent over the past year.

arcpoint markets data

The project points to shippers seeking to route around the chokepoint as tensions persist.

Companies
Australia
BHP Group was among the weakest of the large miners in the Monday session as it faced looming industrial action at its Port Hedland iron ore operations in Western Australia.

Port Hedland is the export gateway for the bulk of BHP's iron ore shipments, and the threatened stoppage weighed on the stock even as the benchmark 62 per cent iron ore price held at US$98.72 a tonne.

Stockhead
AGL Energy was cut to underperform by Macquarie, which lowered its price target to $7.75 from $8.83.

Macquarie argued a structurally oversupplied electricity market would push AGL's earnings recovery out to FY31, and the downgrade left the stock among the day's laggards.

Market Index
Ingenia Communities confirmed it is pursuing residential developer Peet with the backing of a capital partner, with both stocks remaining in a trading halt.

The Australian reported Ingenia, with a market value near $1.8bn, had secured a Japanese investor to help fund a bid for the roughly $800m Peet; Citi trimmed its Ingenia price target to $6.10.

The Australian
Telstra restored its national mobile network by around midday after a fresh outage, though the stock still fell 2.86 per cent.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority's formal investigation into last week's nationwide outage is continuing, keeping the telecoms sector under pressure.

Market Index

Meeting the milestone advances the biotech's licensing arrangement.

City Chic Collective guided to sharp growth in FY26 underlying earnings.

The plus-size apparel retailer pointed to a lift in EBITDA as its turnaround progresses.

Stockhead
Global

The portfolio spans 5.0GWp of solar and wind assets, 3.3GWp operating and 1.7GWp contracted, and the sale marks Shell's full exit from Indian renewable generation.

Williams Companies secured a US$5.34bn investment from a Blackstone-led group.

The capital injection helps fund the US natural-gas pipeline operator's growth pipeline.

The Wall Street Journal

The reductions follow a slump in China deliveries and a restructuring aimed at simplifying the group's brand line-up.

FloWorks, a distributor of industrial valves and flow-control products, generated about US$1bn in revenue in 2025 across more than 60 locations in the US and Canada.

The move takes the burrito chain into the home market of the cuisine it built its US business on.

The states allege the deal breaches the Clayton Act by lessening competition in theatrical distribution and basic cable, and asked the parties to hold off closing pending the case; the Trump administration cleared it without conditions in June.

Brown-Forman, the maker of Jack Daniel's, said its chief executive would step down.

The change comes as the spirits group works through soft demand across its portfolio.

The Wall Street Journal

The reductions come as the information group leans further into artificial intelligence.

The result offered an early read on demand across the Indian IT-services sector.

Realty Income recast and expanded its revolving credit facilities to US$5.5bn and its commercial-paper programs to US$5.5bn.

The move lifts the US net-lease REIT's available liquidity.

Realty Income release
Kongsberg Gruppen reported second-quarter revenue up 31 per cent to NOK10.4bn, its first quarter above NOK10bn.

EBIT was NOK1.7bn at a 16.1 per cent margin, the order backlog reached NOK158bn, and the group completed its acquisition of US missile-maker Zone 5.

Kongsberg Q2 2026 earnings call
Gjensidige Forsikring posted second-quarter profit after tax of NOK2.122bn.

The result absorbed a NOK419m net hit from a Danish Supreme Court workers'-compensation ruling, with return on equity of 33.3 per cent and a solvency ratio of 189 per cent.

Gjensidige Q2 2026 earnings call
Erasca launched a proposed US$500m offering of common stock.

The raise adds funding for the biotech's oncology programs.

Erasca release

The listing would tap US markets for the power arm of the state-controlled oil group.

Quotes of the day
Macro

“If we get another hot reading on core inflation this week, then the FOMC will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term.”

Christopher Waller, Federal Reserve governor
Speech to the New York Association for Business Economics, 13 July
Inflation

“Core inflation this year has steadily moved up, as measured by the 12-month PCE rate, from 3 per cent in December 2025 to 3.4 per cent in May.”

Christopher Waller, Federal Reserve governor
Speech on the economic outlook, 13 July
AI / supply chain

“This is being reflected in some large price increases on selected goods such as semiconductors, computer chips, servers, computers, and peripherals.”

Christopher Waller, Federal Reserve governor
Speech on the economic outlook, 13 July
Geopolitics

“The messages from NATO were clear. Europe must continue to invest in its own defence capabilities and seek joint procurements with other countries. In Ankara, NATO countries announced more than $50 billion in new procurements.”

Eirik Lie, chief executive, Kongsberg Gruppen
Kongsberg Q2 2026 earnings call
Industry outlook

“Modern warfare shows that defence capability is not only about the most advanced systems but also about volume, production pace, stock levels, and having the right cost per effect.”

Eirik Lie, chief executive, Kongsberg Gruppen
Kongsberg Q2 2026 earnings call
Consumer

“We have very recently entered into a partnership with Tesla, one of the most distinctive and innovative brands in the mobility market. Tesla has a strong position in Norway with around one in five new cars sold.”

Geir Holmgren, chief executive, Gjensidige Forsikring
Gjensidige Q2 2026 earnings call
Markets in detail
as of Tuesday, 14 July 2026, 7:15am AEST · levels at each market's last close
Level As of 1d 5d 12mo
Equities
S&P 500 7,515 13 Jul -0.8% -0.3% +20.1%
Nasdaq 25,873 13 Jul -1.6% -0.9% +25.7%
ASX 200 (prior) 8,808 13 Jul -0.3% +2.7%
Stoxx 600 641 13 Jul -1.5% +17.1%
Nikkei 225 67,243 13 Jul -1.9% -3.6% +69.9%
Hang Seng 24,214 13 Jul +0.2% +2.5% +0.3%
Dow Jones 52,499 13 Jul -0.3% -1.1% +18.3%
FTSE 100 10,498 13 Jul -1.4% +17.4%
DAX 25,114 13 Jul +0.2% -2.7% +3.5%
Shanghai Comp 3,914 13 Jul -2.1% -3.2% +11.5%
VIX 17.16 13 Jul +14.2% +10.2% +4.6%
Rates
US 10y 4.61% 13 Jul +4 bp +13 bp +19 bp
US 2y 4.21% 10 Jul +5 bp +7 bp +35 bp
ACGB 10y 4.89% 8 Jul +6 bp +9 bp +63 bp
RBA cash 4.35% 10 Jul +50 bp
FX
AUD/USD 0.6920 13 Jul -0.3% -0.5% +5.2%
DXY 101.29 13 Jul +0.3% +0.4% +3.5%
USD/JPY 162.39 13 Jul +0.3% +0.2% +10.2%
EUR/USD 1.1386 13 Jul -0.2% -0.5% -2.5%
Commodities
Brent $83.18 13 Jul +9.4% +15.5% +18.2%
WTI $78.00 13 Jul +9.2% +13.8% +14.0%
Gold $4,009 13 Jul -2.3% -3.5% +19.4%
Iron ore 62% $98.72 10 Jul +0.2% +0.5% +2.0%
Copper $13,836 13 Jul +0.7% +1.6% +12.8%
Crypto
Bitcoin $62,033 13 Jul -2.7% -0.4% -47.9%
Ethereum $1,761 13 Jul -2.5% +1.0% -40.8%
Calendar
Australia NAB Business Confidence (Jun) at 11:30am AEST and Westpac Consumer Confidence (Jul) at 10:30am AEST.
United States June CPI at 10:30pm AEST, the day's marquee release. Fed speakers Barr, Goolsbee, Cook and Bowman, with Fed chair Kevin Warsh appearing on Capitol Hill.
Earnings Second-quarter results from JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs before the US open; Ericsson and DNB Bank also report.
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For wholesale clients only. Prepared by Arc Point OCIO Pty Ltd (ACN 693 569 765), Corporate Authorised Representative (CAR 1319046) of Capella Advisory (AFSL 550125), for wholesale clients within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth); it is not intended for, and should not be relied on by, retail clients. This note is factual market reporting and general information, with any arcpoint view clearly labelled as such. It is not personal advice and does not take into account any person's objectives, financial situation or needs. Information is drawn from sources believed to be reliable but its accuracy and completeness are not guaranteed. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

Sources: Yahoo Finance, FRED, RBA, company filings.