Australian Consumer Sentiment Falls
2026-06-09 00:55
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
Australia’s Westpac–Melbourne Institute Consumer Sentiment Index dropped 3.5% month-over-month to 80.6 in June 2026, reversing May’s gain and marking its fourth decline this year.
Cost-of-living pressures remained the dominant drag, with the temporary halving of the fuel excise tax offering only fleeting relief.
Household finances weakened sharply: assessments versus a year ago dropped 7.5% to 67.3, while 12-month expectations slid 8.5% to 85.1.
Views on the broader economy were mixed, with the one-year outlook up 4.9% to 77.8 but the five-year measure down 3.2% to 86.5, a three-year low.
The “time to buy a major item” index rose 0.9% to 86.4, and unemployment expectations edged down 0.1% to 139.8.
Westpac economist Matthew Hassan said the impact of three rate hikes this year is increasingly evident, but inflation remains the immediate concern, with energy costs yet to fully feed through.
While a pause is possible at the next meeting, Westpac expects further tightening in the year.