Australian Shares Surge to Four-Week high
The S&P/ASX 200 climbed 2.9 percent within the opening five minutes of Wednesday's session, reaching 8,983 points — the benchmark index's strongest position since March 11.
The rally was directly triggered by the confirmed two-week ceasefire between Washington and Tehran, which sent global oil prices tumbling approximately 15 percent, easing pressure across multiple sectors of the Australian economy.
By 11 a.m. Australian Eastern Standard Time on Wednesday (0100 GMT), 171 of the 200 companies listed on the ASX 200 were trading above Tuesday's closing prices, underscoring the breadth of the market's enthusiasm.
The oil price collapse, however, cut in both directions. Energy heavyweights Woodside and Santos, alongside fuel distributor Ampol, each shed more than 4 percent of their value as investors recalibrated expectations for the sector amid easing supply concerns.
The clearest beneficiaries were Australia's airlines, for which lower fuel costs translate directly into improved margins. Qantas surged 8.6 percent above Tuesday's close, while Virgin Australia posted an even sharper gain of 13.5 percent, reflecting investor confidence that the ceasefire could deliver sustained relief at the fuel pump.
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