AUS 10Y Yield Rises from 4-Month Lows

2026-07-02 03:34 By Joshua Ferrer 1 min. read

Australia’s 10-year government bond yield rose above 4.8%, climbing off from four-month lows as markets continued to wager on near-term US rate hikes, while paring back expectations for further tightening at home.

The sharp de-escalation of the Middle East conflict and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz drove oil prices back to pre-war levels, easing inflation risks and prompting markets to scale back expectations for further rate hikes in Australia.

An August move by the Reserve Bank is now priced in at just 15% chance, while markets see a 50% probability that the tightening cycle has ended.

Meanwhile, bond markets came under pressure after US Treasury yields surged as investors increased bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike ahead of Thursday's crucial jobs report, with a September move now almost fully priced in.

This came despite Fed Chair Kevin Warsh saying inflation expectations had eased over the past month.



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AUS 10Y Yield Rises from 4-Month Lows
Australia’s 10-year government bond yield rose above 4.8%, climbing off from four-month lows as markets continued to wager on near-term US rate hikes, while paring back expectations for further tightening at home. The sharp de-escalation of the Middle East conflict and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz drove oil prices back to pre-war levels, easing inflation risks and prompting markets to scale back expectations for further rate hikes in Australia. An August move by the Reserve Bank is now priced in at just 15% chance, while markets see a 50% probability that the tightening cycle has ended. Meanwhile, bond markets came under pressure after US Treasury yields surged as investors increased bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike ahead of Thursday's crucial jobs report, with a September move now almost fully priced in. This came despite Fed Chair Kevin Warsh saying inflation expectations had eased over the past month.
2026-07-02
AUS 10Y Yield Remains Subdued Despite Hawkish RBA
Australia’s 10-year government bond yield traded around 4.7%, remaining near four-month lows as lower oil prices and wagers of US rate hikes outweighed the RBA’s restrictive policy stance. Minutes from the Reserve Bank's June meeting showed policymakers agreed rates should remain restrictive to curb excess demand and bring inflation back to target even as economic growth slowed. The board also said they are prepared to raise rates further if needed as developments in the Middle East still pose upside risks to inflation. Despite the hawkish tone, the recent retreat in oil prices have led investors to pare the risk of another rate hike at the August meeting to around 15%, with markets also starting to price in rate cuts as early as mid-2027. Meanwhile, mounting bets on US rate hikes have helped Aussie bonds outperform Treasuries, shrinking the yield premium. Strong US economic data underscored the economy’s resilience, prompting markets to price in a rate hike as early as September.
2026-06-30
Australia 10Y Yield Stays Near 4-Month Low
Australia’s 10-year government bond yield rose above 4.7%, but remained near a four-month low as markets pared back expectations of further domestic rate hikes, while renewed Middle East tensions reignited inflation concerns. Although the US and Iran agreed to pause further attacks after the recent exchange of strikes around the Strait of Hormuz, oil prices climbed as the latest escalation disrupted the recovery in oil shipments through the strategic waterway that had followed an earlier interim agreement. In Australia, focus turns to Tuesday's release of minutes from the Reserve Bank’s most recent interest-rate setting meeting. The central bank left the cash rate unchanged at 4.35% at its June meeting following three rate hikes earlier this year. Despite a rebound in employment data, recent mixed inflation figures left the markets split on another rate hike, implied around 50% by year-end, while some have started pricing in rate cuts in the second half of 2027.
2026-06-29