Aussie Stocks Log Worst November in a Decade
2025-11-28 00:51
By
Joshua Ferrer
1 min. read
The S&P/ASX 200 finished nearly flat at 8,614 on Friday, halting its four-session winning streak, and closing the month down 3%, marking its biggest drop in eight months and the weakest November since 2014, as major banks slid on valuation concerns and fading hopes for near-term policy easing.
A recent hotter-than-expected inflation reading and a stronger labor market strengthened the view that the Reserve Bank of Australia's easing cycle has ended and even fueled speculation of a rate hike.
Swaps indicate the central bank may hike rates in December 2026, with markets assigning a 43% probability.
Heavyweight banks led the losses, down 0.7%, with the “Big Four” falling between 0.8% and 1.3% amid tepid earnings.
Still, the benchmark index rose 2.4%, its first weekly gain in five weeks on growing expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut next month.
Technology stocks extended gains by 0.9%, tracking their US peers higher, while gold miners added 1.6% on the back of firm bullion prices.