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Australian consumer sentiment bounces in March, but war looms

By Thomson Reuters Mar 9, 2026 | 6:32 PM

SYDNEY, March 10 (Reuters) – Australia’s consumer sentiment bounced modestly in early March after three months of retreat, a survey showed on Tuesday, though ​the mood was steadily darkening as conflict ‌in the Middle East broadened.

A Westpac-Melbourne Institute survey showed its main index of consumer sentiment rose 1.2% to 91.6 in March. The reading below 100 means pessimists still considerably outnumber ‌optimists.

The ​survey was taken from March 2 ⁠to March 6 and ⁠responses got gloomier as the week and the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran rolled on.

“Responses from those surveyed in the last three days were consistent with ​an index read of just 84,” said Westpac’s head of Australian macro-forecasting, Matthew Hassan.

A separate survey ⁠of consumers from ANZ out ⁠on Tuesday showed a sharp drop ​in confidence last week as the conflict in the Middle ​East pushed petrol prices higher.

Inflation expectations saw the ‌largest weekly rise since the series started in 2010, jumping 0.8 percentage points to 6.1%.

Stubborn inflation had already led the Reserve Bank of Australia to ⁠raise its main cash rate a quarter point to 3.85% in February, and warn of further tightening if needed.

The Westpac ⁠survey’s measure ‌of family finances compared to a year ⁠ago bounced 1.8%, after a steep ​drop ‌the previous month, while the longer-term outlook ​eased 0.1%.

Surprisingly, ⁠a measure of whether it was a good time to buy a major household item jumped 4.9%, to recover much of the fall suffered in February after the RBA’s rate hike.

(Reporting by Wayne Cole; Editing ​by Jamie Freed)