There has been a fundamental change on the ASX. Resources are back while other sectors have struggled. The ASX Materials index is up 50 per cent while the healthcare and tech indices have fallen 45 per cent and 35 per cent respectively.
Consumer discretionary stocks have been sold down. But the miners are on a tear and it isn’t just the big three iron ore diggers.
The gold companies like Evolution Mining, Newmont and to a lesser extent Northern Star have ridden the rise in the price of the precious metal.
Lithium and rare earth miners have done very well. In late 2024, early 2025, fears of overproduction in lithium pushed the metal’s price to 20 per cent of its peak. But now it has rebounded.
Then there are the energy companies – the oil and gas giants Woodside, Santos and Beach Energy, the coal players like New Hope and Whitehaven, the refiners Ampol and Viva Energy and the uranium stocks Paladin and Deep Yellow. They have benefited from the turmoil in the Middle East.
The financials index is always relevant on the ASX because it comprises around 25 per cent of the market. It is mixed over the past 12 months. ANZ is up 20 per cent while Macquarie and Westpac have jumped 13 per cent. Yet CBA and NAB have gone backwards. Some deal with the insurers, with QBE flat while Suncorp and IAG have both fallen more than ten per cent.
Australia is known as the “lucky country” because of its abundance of resources and geographic isolation. And for the past 12 months, that has paid big dividends.