Australia 10-Year Yield Climbs After Hot Inflation Data
2025-10-29 03:18
By
Judith Sib-at
1 min. read
Australia’s 10-year bond yield climbed to 4.34%, its highest in over three weeks, after hotter-than-expected inflation data dampened hopes of a near-term interest rate cut.
Annual inflation accelerated to a more than one-year high of 3.2% in Q3 from 2.1% in Q2, surpassing forecasts of 3% and now above the Reserve Bank’s 2-3% target range.
Crucially, trimmed mean inflation, the RBA’s preferred gauge of underlying price pressures, rose to 3% from 2.7%, also exceeding the anticipated 2.7%.
Moreover, producer inflation increased to 1% in the September quarter from 0.7% in the previous period, topping estimates of 0.8%.
Markets now assign only a 5% probability of an RBA rate cut this week, and less than a 20% chance of a move in December.
Recently, Governor Michele Bullock also downplayed the recent surge in unemployment, saying the labor market is still tight while stressing the board’s cautious stance.
Bond yields also moved higher as the US-China trade deal boosted risk appetite.