Australia revises down commodity revenue forecasts as prices trend lower

By Lewis Jackson

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia slightly revised down its forecasts for resource and energy export earnings on Monday as lower prices across a broad range of commodities and a stronger currency continued to pressure a key source of government revenue.

Australia now expects commodity export earnings to fall about 10% to A$372 billion ($256 billion) for the year ended 30 June 2025, down from a forecast of A$380 billion made in June, according to the official resources and energy quarterly. Revenues hit A$415 billion last year.

The decline is set to continue into 2026, albeit at a slower pace, hitting A$354 billion.

Commodity prices are down because of slower economic growth in the developed world, a consequence of higher interest rates, and weakness in China, a major source of demand for steel and other commodities, the report said.

Australia’s largest export iron ore has been particularly hard hit by the slowdown in the Chinese property sector and prices are down about a third this year.

The country forecasts iron ore export revenue to fall to A$99 billion in the year ended 30 June 2026 from A$138 billion last year.

Prices were lower across much of the basket of resources covered by the report, including metals important to the renewable energy transition like nickel and lithium.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A miner holds a lump of iron ore at a mine located in the Pilbara region of Western Australia, December 2, 2013.   REUTERS/David Gray/File photo

Lower prices driven by a surge of supply from Indonesia have forced some Australian nickel mines to shut.

($1 = 1.4550 Australian dollars)

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Nicholas ‘Nick’ Statman entered the property industry in 2001 and set up a property buying company that quickly established itself as one of the biggest in the sector. During this time the Company successfully transacted on thousands of residential properties across the UK. Nicholas Statman was an early pioneer of the ‘quick sale’ niche market which has since grown considerably with a multitude of companies now operating in the sector. Nicholas Statman has strategically built a sizeable residential and commercial property portfolio with a view to holding for optimum capital growth and a long term passive income. Nicholas Statman has been involved in almost every aspect of the property sector over a 20 year period – this includes buying and selling, development, letting and management and is now involved in the fast growing online/ hybrid Estate Agent industry.

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