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Westpac Banking Corporation (WBCPI.AX)

ASX - ASX Delayed price. Currency in AUD
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101.30+0.15 (+0.15%)
At close: 04:10PM AEST
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Previous close101.15
Open101.21
Bid101.30 x 0
Ask101.38 x 0
Day's range101.21 - 101.40
52-week range100.46 - 104.00
Volume5,578
Avg. volume6,726
Market cap347.339B
Beta (5Y monthly)0.86
PE ratio (TTM)74.27
EPS (TTM)1.36
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yield5.61 (5.54%)
Ex-dividend date06 June 2024
1y target estN/A
  • Bloomberg

    Australian Consumer Confidence Slumps as Prices, Rates Take Toll

    (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s consumer confidence declined in April as persistent inflation and interest rates at a 12-year high continued to squeeze households, leaving them gloomy about the economic outlook.Most Read from BloombergTrumpism Is Emptying ChurchesIran’s Better, Stealthier Drones Are Remaking Global WarfareWhy India’s South Rejects Modi — And Why It MattersBlackstone Nears Buyout of Skin-Care Company L’OccitaneGermany to Order Ships, Armored Vehicles Worth Up to €7 BillionSentiment dr

  • Reuters

    Australia consumer mood darkens anew in March - survey

    Australian consumer sentiment eased from 20-month highs in March as worries about the economic outlook and family finances returned to darken the mood, a survey showed on Tuesday. The Westpac-Melbourne Institute index of consumer sentiment slipped 1.8% in March, from February when it jumped 6.2%. "Last month we saw some promising signs that the consumer gloom that has dominated over the last two years might finally be starting to lift," said Matthew Hassan, a senior economist at Westpac.

  • Reuters

    Australia bank CEOs call for a fix to housing shortage

    SYDNEY (Reuters) -Australia's housing shortage may be driving prices higher but is locking out first-time homeowners and migrants needed to fill skills shortages across the country, the CEOs of Australia's three largest banks said on Tuesday. After years of ultra-low interest rates pushed home prices higher, Australia faces a long-term drop in the number of younger people buying homes, which could mean more people retiring in weaker financial positions, according to a 2023 government report. At a banking conference in Sydney, the heads of Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank and Westpac, Australia's top 3 lenders, blamed a housing supply shortage and urged local governments to speed up planning approvals.