호주 시장이 주목하는 순간입니다. 매년 여덟 차례, 호주중앙은행의 현금금리 결정은 AUD를 움직이고 ASX 200의 흐름을 바꾸며 경제 전반의 기대를 다시 조정할 수 있습니다.

호주중앙은행(RBA)은 호주의 중앙은행입니다. 2024년 Reserve Bank Act 개정에 따른 현대화된 책무 아래, RBA의 주요 역할은 호주 경제의 물가 안정과 완전고용을 지원하는 것입니다. 이를 주로 통화정책을 통해 수행하며, 그중 하나가 은행들이 익일물 대출에 대해 서로 부과하는 금리인 현금금리 목표를 설정하는 것입니다.트레이더에게 RBA가 중요한 이유는 그 결정이 호주와 연계된 거의 모든 자산에 영향을 줄 수 있기 때문입니다. 현금금리 변화나 총재의 발언 톤 변화만으로도 AUD 가치가 움직이고, ASX 200의 가격이 재평가되며, 은행·광업·부동산 등 섹터에 대한 기대가 달라질 수 있습니다.
| 이벤트 | 빈도 | 시점 | 왜 중요한가요 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 현금금리 결정, 핵심 금리 발표 | 연 8회 | 2:30 PM | 현금금리 목표를 설정합니다. AUD와 ASX 200에 직접적인 영향을 줍니다 |
| 총재 기자회견, 발언 톤과 향후 가이던스 | 연 8회 | 3:30 PM | 향후 금리 경로에 대한 뉘앙스와 가이던스를 제공합니다 |
| 회의 의사록, 이사회의 판단 근거 | 각 회의 2주 후 | 11:30 AM | 통화정책위원회 내부의 매파적 또는 비둘기파적 성향을 보여줍니다 |
| 통화정책 성명, 분기별 전망 | 분기별, 2월·5월·8월·11월. | 2:30 PM | 인플레이션, 국내총생산(GDP), 실업률에 대한 심층 전망입니다 |
| 금융안정 보고서, 은행과 주택시장 | 반기별, 3월과 9월 | 11:30 AM | 호주 은행 시스템과 주택시장의 건전성을 점검합니다 |

금리 결정이 시장을 움직이는 방식
현금금리가 오후 2시 30분 화면에 표시될 때쯤이면, 상당 부분의 움직임은 이미 가격에 반영되었을 수 있습니다. RBA 결정의 6단계 흐름을 이해하면, 발표 전 이미 반영된 요소와 이후 몇 시간 동안 여전히 바뀔 수 있는 요소를 트레이더가 파악하는 데 도움이 됩니다.
RBA 이코노미스트들은 인플레이션, 고용, 임금, 글로벌 여건에 대한 최신 지표를 평가합니다.
통화정책위원회는 비공개로 데이터, 내부 전망, 시장 기대를 종합적으로 검토합니다.
현금금리 목표는 AEST 오후 2시 30분에 발표되며, 이사회 판단 근거에 대한 짧은 성명도 함께 공개됩니다.
AEST 오후 3시 30분, 총재가 질문에 답합니다. 발언 톤은 금리 자체만큼 중요할 때가 많습니다.
2주 후 의사록이 공개되어 결정이 얼마나 박빙이었는지, 다음 회의에서 무엇이 바뀔 수 있는지를 보여줍니다.
매년 2월, 5월, 8월, 11월에 통화정책 성명이 RBA의 전망을 업데이트합니다.
CFD로 RBA 이벤트 거래하기
RBA 결정은 시장 전반에 차별적인 움직임을 만들 수 있습니다. 금리 인상은 AUD를 지지할 수 있지만, 소비재 주식에는 부담이 되고 은행 마진에는 긍정적으로 작용할 수 있습니다. RBA 결정일에는 AUD, ASX 200, 개별 섹터에서 빠른 양방향 움직임이 자주 나타나며, 때로는 서로 다른 방향으로 움직이기도 합니다.
차액결제거래(CFD)는 트레이더가 광범위한 지수만 거래하는 대신, 이러한 서로 다른 움직임에 대해 개별적으로 관점을 취할 수 있게 해줍니다. 또한 총재 기자회견과 결정의 배경 데이터가 시장에 반영되는 과정에서 포지션 규모를 정밀하게 조절하고 노출을 관리하는 데 도움이 될 수 있습니다.
시장이 결정과 총재의 발언 톤을 소화하는 동안 AUD 또는 ASX 200에서 어느 방향으로든 포지션을 취할 수 있습니다.
RBA로 인한 변동성은 발표 전후 몇 시간에서 며칠 사이에 집중되는 경향이 있습니다. CFD는 이러한 이벤트 중심의 거래 구간에 잘 맞을 수 있습니다.
손절 주문과 지정가 주문은 진입 전 리스크를 정하는 데 도움이 됩니다. 주요 뉴스 전후로 슬리피지와 스프레드가 확대될 수 있을 때 특히 중요합니다.
하나의 계좌로 AUD 통화쌍, ASX 200 지수, 호주 주식 CFD에 접근하고 미국 시장도 함께 이용할 수 있습니다.

빠른 체결, 경쟁력 있는 가격, 내장 리스크 관리 도구와 함께 AUD 통화쌍, ASX 200, 글로벌 주식 CFD에 접근하세요.


If you have ever wondered why a forex pair moves sharply on a single Tuesday afternoon, the answer often sits inside one number: the cash rate.
On 5 May 2026, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raised its cash rate target by 25 basis points (bps) to 4.35%. The decision unwound much of the easing cycle traders had spent the previous year debating. Markets repriced quickly, and the Australian dollar moved against major peers as traders digested the decision.
For new traders, decisions like this can feel chaotic.
The chart moves before the headline finishes loading. Spreads widen. Stop levels can be tested in seconds. The financial media then fills with confident takes that often disagree with one another.
This playbook is designed to help you make sense of that chaos. Not by predicting the next move, but by understanding how the cash rate works, how it can ripple through markets, and how to prepare a process before the next decision lands.


This afternoon, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) did what plenty of forecasters had pencilled in, but few quite believed would actually arrive. It lifted the official cash rate by another 25 basis points (bps) to 4.35 per cent.
Across the water in Tokyo, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) is still sitting at 0.75 per cent, with Governor Ueda fielding three dissenting board members and asking everyone to be patient.
That leaves the interest rate gap between Sydney and Tokyo at 360 bps, the widest it has been in this cycle. And that gap is not just an economic footnote. It is the fuel behind one of the world’s most popular, and most accident-prone, trades in currency markets: the Yen carry trade.
This is where the story gets interesting.
A carry trade is when investors borrow money in a country with very low interest rates and park it in a country with higher ones. The Japanese yen has been the world’s favourite borrowing currency for years, mostly because Japanese rates were pinned near zero for a generation.
Borrow yen at 0.75 per cent, buy Australian dollars yielding 4.35 per cent, and investors may collect the difference. When the AUD is stable or rising, the trade can look wonderfully simple. When it turns, it can become brutally complicated.
That is the mechanism and now... to put it on a chart.
You can see why traders are paying attention. The green line keeps stepping up. The dashed line has gone flat since January. That fan-out is the story in one picture.
But the chart only tells half of it. The other half is why these two central banks have ended up in such different places.
The RBA is not raising rates because the economy is humming along, rather, it is raising them because petrol has crossed 240 cents a litre and Governor Bullock has decided imported energy inflation cannot be ignored.
The BOJ, meanwhile, would dearly like to hike to defend a yen flirting with the 160 mark against the US dollar. The problem is that it is also wary of upsetting a Nikkei 225 sitting near record highs around 60,000.
So the BOJ waits, the RBA acts, and AUD/JPY becomes one of the cleaner expressions of the gap.
The headline divergence is one thing. The carry now on offer is where things start to bite.
A 50 bps widening in six months is not small. It changes how attractive the trade looks on a yield basis. More importantly, it changes how many traders may be sitting in the same position.
And crowded trades have a habit of looking calm right up until they do not.
This is not just a macro story sitting on a central bank noticeboard. It can show up directly in the prices on a CFD trader’s screen, and it may change how several common instruments behave at once.
Start with leverage. Contracts for difference (CFDs) amplify both sides of a wider rate gap: the slow grind higher and the sudden snap lower.
Then there is overnight financing, which broadly reflects the rate differential between the two currencies. With the gap now at 360 bps, a long AUD/JPY position may have positive overnight financing, while a short position may pay it. That does not make long AUD/JPY the right trade. It simply means the cost profile has changed.
The divergence also radiates outward. Nikkei 225 CFDs can ride the weak-yen tailwind, but may take a hit if the Yen strengthens on intervention chatter. Gold CFDs can also catch a bid when carry positions unwind. USD/JPY around 160 is the chart the Ministry of Finance is likely to care about, and a break there could pull the yen higher against more than just the dollar.
That is the honest summary: a widening rate gap does not hand CFD traders a trade. It hands them a regime where the opportunity looks bigger, but so does the trapdoor.
Rate divergence stories feel mathematically clean. The numbers can suggest a currency should appreciate, traders pile in, and the chart obliges. Then one intervention headline lands, the move reverses in 20 minutes, and stops are hit at the worst available price.
The bias to watch is carry complacency, the assumption that because the trade has worked for months, it will keep working. That is usually when the market becomes least forgiving.
A risk question for traders is simple: if this pair moved 3 per cent in the wrong direction overnight, would the position size still be reasonable? If the answer is no, that may say more about sizing than the trade view.
What traders may want on the radar: watchlists that reflect the divergence, broker swap rates and margin policies, and a clear view on what level of volatility they are prepared to sit through.
Though the carry story has momentum, it also has a tripwire and the next move may depend on which one markets notice first.


Few institutions shape everyday Australian life as quietly, or as powerfully, as the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA).
Every time you renew a mortgage, open a savings account, or watch the Australian dollar move, the RBA's decisions are somewhere in the background.
But what actually goes on inside the bank, and what drives the calls that ripple through the entire Australian economy?
The RBA is Australia’s central bank. Unlike commercial banks that lend to individuals and businesses, the RBA lends to financial institutions, issues the nation's currency, and acts as the government's banker.
It also plays a role in overseeing the stability of the broader financial system. It can step in during periods of economic stress to ensure credit keeps flowing.
What is central bank independence, and why does it matter?
For the average Australian, the RBA is most visible through its influence on interest rates. By setting a target for the cash rate, it shapes borrowing and saving costs across the economy.
This influence can filter through to mortgage rates, business lending, and the price of the Australian dollar.
The cash rate is the interest rate the RBA charges on overnight loans between banks. Banks constantly lend money to each other to manage their daily cash needs, and the RBA sets the floor on what those borrowing costs are.
When the RBA raises the cash rate, banks tend to pass that cost on to borrowers; when it cuts, interest on repayments tends to fall.
This knock-on effect is why the cash rate is such a powerful tool. Banks price their products off the cash rate, so a 0.25% RBA move typically flows through to variable mortgage rates within weeks.
A large share of Australian mortgages are on variable rates, so any change in the cash rate tends to pass through to household budgets faster than in countries where fixed-rate lending is more prominent.
The RBA board meets eight times per year to set monetary policy, with meeting dates published in advance.
The Board has nine members: the Governor, the Deputy Governor, the Secretary to the Treasury, and six external members appointed by the Treasurer for five-year terms. Decisions are made by consensus where possible, with the Governor holding a casting vote if needed.
These members make decisions with the intention of maintaining price stability and supporting full employment, with the economic prosperity and welfare of the Australian people as the overarching objective.
Price stability generally means keeping inflation within a 2–3% target band on average over time. The "on average over time" framing is deliberate; the RBA doesn't panic if inflation briefly strays outside the band, but sustained deviation in either direction can prompt the Board to consider a policy response.
Full employment is viewed in terms of the Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU), the lowest unemployment rate the economy can sustain without generating inflationary wage pressure. Estimates vary, but the RBA has historically placed this around 4–4.5%.
The tension between these two goals defines most RBA decisions. A strong labour market is good news for workers, but it can push wages (and therefore inflation) higher. On the other hand, cooling inflation often requires accepting some rise in unemployment.
In the lead-up to each meeting, RBA staff prepare extensive briefing materials covering every major economic indicator. The Board debates the evidence over two days before reaching a decision. The outcome is announced publicly at 2:30 pm AEDT on the meeting day, followed by a detailed statement and a press conference by the Governor.
The current rate cycle is one of the most aggressive in the RBA's modern history. After holding the cash rate at a record low of 0.10% through the COVID pandemic, the RBA began hiking in May 2022 and raised rates thirteen times before pausing at 4.35% in November 2023.
A borrower with a $750,000 variable-rate mortgage saw their monthly repayments rise by roughly $1,500 to $1,800 between May 2022 and late 2023, a significant squeeze on household budgets that fed directly into the consumer slowdown the RBA was trying to engineer.
Throughout 2025, the RBA periodically dropped the rate back down, with it now sitting at 3.75% after a recent hike in February 2026.

Monthly CPI is generally considered the most important single data point for RBA watchers. If the data returns a “quarterly trimmed mean CPI” print above 3%, it can sharpen expectations of a hike or delay cuts (particularly if it surprises to the upside). The “trimmed mean” is the RBA's preferred measure as it tends to reduce data noise from volatility.
The labour force data includes numbers on the unemployment and underemployment rates, and wage growth. The RBA watches these numbers closely for any signs that wages may be rising at a pace inconsistent with the inflation target.
Between formal meetings, the Governor testifies before the House Economics Committee and delivers public speeches. These are closely scrutinised for sentiment signals of the board. Simple shifts in language, from "patient" to "vigilant", for example, can often be perceived as a change in tone that could influence the rate decision in upcoming meetings.
The “neutral rate” is the cash rate range the RBA believes will neither speed the economy up nor slow it down. The current neutral cash rate is estimated at around 3.0–3.5%, which is below the actual rate of 3.75%, a sign that the RBA is still pumping the brakes on the economy. As the rate gets closer to the neutral zone, it can signal less urgency for the RBA to keep cutting. However, surprise data can always upend this assumption.
The RBA doesn't operate in isolation. If the US Federal Reserve holds rates higher for longer, it limits the RBA's room to cut without weakening the AUD and importing inflation through higher import prices.
The RBA's job is to keep the Australian economy on an even keel, and the cash rate is its main tool for doing so. Its decisions touch almost every corner of Australian financial life, from what you pay on your mortgage to how the Aussie dollar trades.
For traders, understanding how the RBA thinks and what it is watching goes a long way toward making sense of the broader Australian economic environment.


2026 is not giving investors much breathing room. It seems markets may have largely moved past the idea that rate cuts are just around the corner and into a year where inflation may prove harder to control than many expected.
Goods inflation has picked up, while services inflation remains relatively sticky due to ongoing labour cost pressures. Housing costs, particularly rents, also remain a key source of inflation pressure.
The RBA is trying to stay credible on inflation without pushing the economy too far the other way.
CPI is still around 3.8 per cent (above target), wages are still rising at about 0.8 per cent over the quarter, and unemployment is around 4.1 per cent.
Based on market-implied pricing, rate hikes are not expected soon, so the way the RBA explains its decision can matter almost as much as the decision itself. If the tone shifts expectations, those expectations can move markets.
This is a playbook for RBA-heavy weeks in 2026. It covers what to watch across sectors, lists the key triggers, and explains which indicators may shift sentiment.

Banks are where the RBA shows up fastest in the Australian economy. Rates can hit borrowers quickly and feed into funding costs and sentiment.
In tighter phases, margins can improve at first, but that can flip if funding costs rise faster, or if credit quality starts to weaken. The balance between those forces is what matters most.
If banks rally into an RBA decision week, it may mean the market thinks higher for longer supports earnings. If they sell off, it may mean the market thinks higher for longer hurts borrowers. You can get two different readings from the same headline.
If the RBA sounds more hawkish than expected, banks may react early as markets reassess growth and credit risk expectations. The first move can sometimes set the tone for the session.

When policy is tight, consumer discretionary becomes a live test of household resilience. This is where higher everyday costs often show up fastest.
Big calls about the consumer can look obvious until the data stops backing them up. When that happens, the narrative can shift quickly.
If the tone from the RBA is more hawkish than expected, the sector may be sensitive to rate expectations. Any initial move may not persist, and subsequent price action can depend on incoming data and positioning

Resources can act as a read on global growth, but currency moves and central bank tone can change how that story lands in Australia.
In 2026, tariffs and geopolitics could also create sharper headline moves than usual, so gap risk can sit on top of the normal cycle.
The RBA still matters through two channels: the Australian dollar and overall risk appetite. Both can reprice the sector quickly, even when commodity prices have not moved much.
If the RBA tone turns more restrictive while global growth stays stable, resources may hold up better than other parts of the market. Strong cash flows can matter more, and the real asset angle can attract buyers.

Defensives are meant to be the calmer corner of the market when everything else feels messy. In 2026, they still have one big weakness: discount rates.
Quality defensives can draw inflows when growth looks shaky, but some defensive growth stocks still trade like long-duration assets. They can be hit when yields rise, even if the business looks solid. That means earnings may be steady while valuations still move around.
If the RBA sounds hawkish and cyclicals start to wobble, defensives can attract relative inflows, but that can depend on yields staying contained. If yields rise sharply, long-duration defensives can still de-rate.

In 2026, hard assets may be less about the simple inflation-hedge story and more about tail risk and policy uncertainty.
When confidence weakens, hard assets often receive more attention. They are not driven by one factor, and gold can still fall if the main drivers run against it.
If the market starts to question inflation control or policy credibility, the hard-asset narrative can strengthen. If the RBA stays restrictive while disinflation continues, gold can lose urgency, and money can rotate into other trades.

In some RBA weeks, the first move shows up in rates and the Australian dollar, and equities follow later through sector rotation rather than a clean index move.
When guidance shifts, the RBA can change how markets move together. You can end up with a flat index while sectors swing hard in opposite directions.
If the decision is expected but the statement leans hawkish, the front end may reprice first, and the AUD can move with it. Realised volatility can still jump even if the index barely moves, as the market rewrites the path and rotates positions under the surface.

Theme baskets may let traders express a macro regime while reducing single-name risk. They also introduce their own risks, especially around events.
If RBA language reinforces a “restrictive and uncertain” regime, theme baskets tied to value, quality, or hard assets may attract attention, particularly if broad indices get choppy.
The point of this playbook is not to predict the exact headline; it is to know where the second-order effects usually land, and to have a short checklist ready before the decision hits.
Keeping these triggers and risks in view may help some traders structure their monitoring around RBA decisions throughout 2026.
Because markets often pre-price the decision. The incremental information is guidance on whether the RBA sounds comfortable, concerned, or open to moving again.
Some traders look to front-end rates, the AUD, and sector leadership as early indicators, but these signals can be noisy and influenced by positioning and liquidity.
Because a large part of their valuation can be sensitive to discount rates and funding costs. When yields move, valuations can reprice quickly.
Not always. If yields jump, long-duration defensives can still be repriced lower even with stable earnings.
Because they can act as a hedge when trust in policy credibility wobbles, but they also carry crowding and real-yield risks.
이 페이지에서 언급된 RBA, 현금금리 수준, 시장 반응 및 경제 데이터는 게시 당시 공개적으로 이용 가능한 정보를 바탕으로 한 예시용이며, 사전 고지 없이 변경될 수 있습니다.