Australian Core Inflation Hits 3.2%, RBA Sees No Rate Cuts Soon
The acceleration in core inflation boosted expectations that the RBA will hold rates higher for longer, pushing short‑end yields higher. Australian 3‑year bond yields jumped 8 basis points to 4.12% as markets repriced the RBA’s expected rate path, with the move driven by diminished hopes for near‑term easing.
- ▼ Core inflation exceeding RBA target forces hawkish repricing
- ▲ Dovish shift in RBA minutes or speech could pull yields lower
- ▲ Any global risk‑off move that boosts safe‑haven demand for bonds
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Why did Australian 3‑year bond yields jump after the CPI data?
The core inflation acceleration led traders to push back expectations for RBA rate cuts, driving short‑end yields higher as the market priced in a higher‑for‑longer rate environment. The yield curve can steepen as the RBA is seen holding tight.
Is this a buying opportunity for Australian government bonds?
With yields rising, bonds offer higher income but capital risk due to ongoing inflation uncertainty. Investors may wait for clearer signs of disinflation before entering, as more rate hikes are not priced in but could materialize if inflation persists.