Australia Briefing
Good morning, it’s Paul-Alain from the Melbourne bureau with your midweek briefing. The ASX is set to open in the green. But first... Today’
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Good morning, it’s Paul-Alain from the Melbourne bureau with your midweek briefing. The ASX is set to open in the green. But first...

Today’s must-reads:
• CBA profit lifts to A$10.25 billion
• Reserve Bank lowers key rate
• Dominos sells $1.32 billion in bonds

What's happening now

Commonwealth Bank of Australia profit met estimates as loan growth and a buoyant property market supported the country’s biggest lender. Cash profit from continuing operations came in at A$10.25 billion ($6.7 billion) for the 12 months ended June 30, according to a statement Wednesday. That compared with the A$10.26 billion average estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Sydney Airport said flights are operating as scheduled after a police officer’s weapon was fired inside the terminal early Wednesday. No one was injured in the incident, though one man was arrested, authorities said. Footage on local media appeared to show a man shouting as he was pinned on the floor by several people near a cafe.

The Reserve Bank on Tuesday lowered its key rate to 3.6% — a level not seen since April 2023 — and in line with expectations. RBA Governor Michelle Bullock signaled a “couple more” interest-rate cuts will be required to achieve its latest forecasts that showed weak productivity dragging on expected economic growth.

Domino’s Pizza Inc. sold $1.32 billion of bonds backed by most of its assets to refinance its debt. Domino’s also raised $320 million through a variable funding note facility, not offered to investors. Barclays Plc is leading the transaction, joined by Guggenheim Securities LLC.

Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan

Spark New Zealand has agreed to sell 75% of its fledgling data center business, reducing debt and bringing in Pacific Equity Partners to help fund expansion plans. Spark only identified data centers as a serious growth opportunity last year. 

Bearish wagers on Commonwealth Bank of Australia have tumbled to the lowest in three years, supported by the stock’s reputation as a haven. CBA’s short interest as a percentage of equity float has declined to around the smallest level since June 2022.

Lithium producers’ shares fell yesterday — following sharp gains on Monday that were driven by the closure of a major mine closure — as the market weighed the outlook for Chinese output of the battery metal. IGO Ltd., Mineral Resources Ltd., PLS Ltd. retreated from Monday’s highs. The lithium market was rocked after Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. confirmed the suspension of its Jianxiawo mine in the hub of Yichun, a move that may help to ease oversupply.

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What happened overnight

Here’s what my colleague, market strategist Mike “Willo” Wilson says happened while we were sleeping…

US stocks rose to a record as an in-line inflation reading bolstered speculation the Federal Reserve will have room to cut rates in September. Short-end Treasury yields fell as the data show the cost of tariff-exposed goods didn’t rise as much as feared. A Bloomberg gauge of the dollar resumed a decline, while kiwi and Aussie closed higher. The latter shrugged off a dovish RBA cut on Tuesday that also signaled further easing. Australia has some wage and home loan data today, neither of which should erase Aussie dollar’s overnight gain. ASX futures point to a strong opening for local stocks.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested that the Federal Reserve ought to be open to a bigger, 50 basis-point cut in the benchmark interest rate next month, after having skipped a move at the last meeting. He was speaking hours after the latest inflation report, which he said showcased that economists had misread the likely effect of tariffs.

China Evergrande Group said its Hong Kong stock will be delisted, marking the end of an era for the former high-flying developer whose demise came to symbolize the country’s property bust. With a debt amounting to HK$350 billion (US$45 billion) today, Evergrande’s collapse was by far the biggest in a crisis that dragged down China’s economic growth and created a shadow over demand for Australia’s biggest export — iron ore. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said he won’t cede the eastern region of Donbas to Russia and pushed for Kyiv to be included in talks as the US and Russian leaders prepare to meet on Friday. Vladimir Putin is demanding that Ukraine give up the Donetsk and Luhansk regions that together form Donbas as a condition to unlock a ceasefire and enter negotiations over a longer-term peace accord.

Beijing has urged local companies to avoid using Nvidia Corp.’s H20 processors, particularly for government-related purposes, complicating the chipmaker’s return to China after the Trump administration reversed an effective US ban on such sales. Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. both recently secured Washington’s approval to resume lower-end AI chip sales to China, on the controversial and legally questionable condition that they give the US government a 15% cut of the related revenue.

Indonesia will continue diplomatic talks with Malaysia over oil-rich regions of disputed waters instead of pursuing legal action. The two countries have overlapping claims to the continental shelf and exclusive economic zone off the eastern coast of Borneo — known as Ambalat in Indonesia and the Sulawesi Sea in Malaysia.

Hong Kong’s rental housing market is expected to hit a record high by October, fueled by a wave of Chinese mainlanders, largely students and professionals, moving to the city. Back in 2022, Hong Kong was experiencing a mass exodus of expatriates due to the government’s crackdown on civil society and Covid policies. 

What to watch

• Australia to Sell A$1.2 Billion 4.25% 2035 Bonds, 11:00 a.m.
• Second Quarter Home Loans Value Data, 11:30 a.m. 
• Second Quarter Wage Price Index Data, 11:30 a.m.

One more thing...

They’re used in smartphones, electric vehicles and high-tech military applications. In 2025, rare earths are one of the hottest commodities around town, due to China banning some exports to the US earlier in the year. There’s only two companies in the world outside China that produce them at scale — our very own Lynas Rare Earths Ltd., and an American firm called MP Materials. Our columnist Thomas Black hones in on recent funding.

 America's only rare earths producer, MP Materials, has been shipping all its output from the Mountain Pass mine in California to China. Photographer: Joe Buglewicz/Bloomberg
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