Australia's ASX sees 2026 costs soar amid CEO exit, regulatory probe

Reuters
Feb 12
Australia's ASX sees 2026 costs soar amid CEO exit, regulatory probe 

ASX warns of sharply higher 2026 expense growth

Shares drop amid CEO Lofthouse's planned departure

Expenses rise due to system outages and regulatory scrutiny

Feb 12 (Reuters) - Australia's ASX Ltd ASX.AX warned of sharply higher 2026 costs on Thursday, extending a sell-off sparked by CEO Helen Lofthouse's planned exit and overshadowing a rise in first-half underlying profit.

The exchange operator now expects total expenses to rise 20%-23% this fiscal year, from 14%-19%, as it absorbs costs related to system outages, regulatory scrutiny, and a corporate watchdog probe.

Shares dropped as much as 2.6% to A$53.92, adding to the prior session's 6.2% slide and underperforming a 0.5% gain in the broader benchmark index .AXJO.

For the six months ended December 31, the bourse operator reported an underlying net profit after tax of A$263.6 million ($187.71 million), compared with A$253.7 million a year ago, helped by stronger trading volumes.

Cost pressures dominated the results, with expenses up 20% to A$264.3 million, driven by the regulatory probe, transformation spending and higher costs from ageing assets and intangible write-offs.

Lofthouse's planned departure comes as ASX faces intensifying scrutiny after a CHESS batch settlement failure in late-2024. ASX has since published an incident review and said it would provide an A$1 million credit disbursement to settlement participants through rebates.

ASX has drawn closer regulatory attention following recent operational glitches, including an August 2025 name mix‑up and a December announcements‑platform outage.

The leadership change also comes amid rising competition from Cboe Global Markets and a sweeping Australian Securities and Investments Commission $(ASIC)$ review of ASX's governance and operational risk management, with a final report due by March 31, 2026.

ASIC inquiry costs are expected to be at the top end of the A$25 million–A$35 million range.

ASX declared a fully franked interim dividend of 101.8 Australian cents a share, down 8.5% from a year ago, with a 75% payout ratio at the bottom end of its updated guidance range.

($1 = 1.4043 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Roushni Nair and Shivangi Lahiri in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri and Rashmi Aich)

((Shivangi.Lahiri@thomsonreuters.com; Roushni.Nair@thomsonreuters.com))

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