
When you track the ASX day after day, you eventually spot those moments when a stock stops drifting and suddenly kicks into gear. A clear breakout, the kind that pushes past weeks of hesitation, often tells you buyers are finally taking control. In this article, we’re looking at three Australian companies whose share prices have recently surged through key resistance levels. These aren’t just quick spikes or one-day wonders. Each chart shows a pattern of tightening ranges, rising volume, and a decisive move that suggests momentum may continue.

Zip closed FY25 with what we consider a genuine inflection point: a record A$13.1bn in TTV and A$170.3m of group cash EBTDA — a level of profitability that would’ve sounded fanciful 18 months ago. The US arm is now the locomotive of the group, while ANZ has quietly rebuilt its margin spine. Momentum spilled straight into 1Q FY26, with TTV of A$3.9bn and cash EBTDA of A$62.8m, prompting management to hike US TTV guidance and expand the buyback to A$100m.

We view Invictus Energy as a rare example of an explorer with a clear pathway to development in one of Africa’s last underexplored rift systems. The Mukuyu gas-condensate discovery in Zimbabwe’s Cabora Bassa Basin anchors the portfolio, while high-impact follow-up at Musuma-1 and a strategic financing partnership with Al Mansour Holdings (AMH) materially de-risk the next stage of value creation.

In the current markets, even major players listed on the S&P/ASX 200 aren’t immune to caution flags on the charts. In this article, we'll examine three ASX-listed stocks whose price action suggests further downside may be ahead. We’ll look beyond the fundamentals and focus on technical signals: breakdowns below key moving averages, chart patterns like lower highs or descending triangles, and weakening momentum indicators.

BrainChip is a pioneer in ultra-low-power, neuromorphic AI processing, anchored by its Akida spiking neural network architecture. With US$13.5 million cash as of June 2025, the company is funding aggressive commercialisation efforts, including next-gen Akida 2.0, Pico devices, and defence / edge-AI partnerships. While financial performance is still pre-profit, recent commercial wins, deep IP protection, and product roadmap momentum provide compelling optional upside. Key risks include cash burn, technology adoption, and scaling edge-AI deployments.

European Lithium is positioning itself as a future supplier of battery-grade lithium to Europe, with the Wolfsberg Project in Austria advancing through permitting, engineering, and early-stage financing activities.