Australian consumer sentiment slumps on Iran war worries

April 13, 2026 8:33 PM EDT

Shoppers walk out of a mall in Sydney's CBD in Sydney, Australia, July 3, 2024. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy

SYDNEY, April 14 (Reuters) - ‌Australia's consumer ​sentiment ​slumped in April to its lowest in more than two years, a survey ‌showed on Tuesday, as consumers seem to ⁠be unnerved by the impacts of the Iran conflict on ‌the economy and future ‌inflation.

A Westpac-Melbourne Institute survey showed its main index of consumer sentiment fell 12.5% to 80.1 ​in April. A reading below 100 means pessimists considerably outnumber optimists.

“Australian consumers are being hit ⁠by another ‘cost of living’ shock," said Westpac's head of Australian Macro-Forecasting, ​Matthew Hassan.

"The spike in fuel prices following the U.S.–Israel war on Iran and ​a further 25bp interest rate ‌increase are again putting finances under intense pressure ... the April sentiment drop is ⁠the biggest monthly decline since the onset of COVID pandemic."

All index components deteriorated sharply in April, with ⁠the biggest fall seen across components tracking assessments of Current ​Conditions.

Near-term expectations for the economy and family finances also fell sharply, suggesting consumers were seeing little prospect for ‌improvement and were bracing for more difficulties, the survey said.

The war is having ‌a major dampening effect on buyer attitudes, with ⁠the Time to ‌Buy a Major ​Item sub-index dropping 15% to 83.3.

(Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Christian ‌Schmollinger)



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