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The 2026–27 Budget landed in a high-pressure macro environment. With inflation at 5% and the RBA cash rate at 4.35% after three consecutive hikes, the gap between fiscal policy and market price may matter more than usual. The first reaction was predictable.
The more important question is where the transmission lag takes things from here.
How does the RBA actually work?
The Budget sets the scene, but the RBA controls the script. Understand the mechanics behind Australia's central bank before you track the next move.
The Budget Transmission Chain
Fuel, tax relief, critical minerals
through June quarter
Next decision: 16 June
Sector rotation underway
NOTE: The chain from Canberra to your portfolio does not move in a straight line but it does follow a logic. Educational illustration. Data as at 13 May 2026.
Policy, price and what the market may have missed
The Budget contains several significant measures and the ones most likely to move markets are not always the ones that dominate the news coverage. Here is how the major items stack up.
Moves that made sense
Energy and fuel security: A$10 billion Fuel Security Reserve. A direct intervention in the sector driving Australia’s inflation spike. Automotive fuel rose 32.8% in the March quarter. This could be a limited tailwind for domestic energy processors and critical minerals names, subject to capital deployment timing.
Critical minerals: Critical Minerals Strategic Reserve and Future Made in Australia funding create a durable government backdrop for downstream processors. Watch for specific procurement announcements and offtake agreements.
The moves that may have run ahead of the evidence
The property sector reaction is worth watching carefully. It is also worth being precise about which part of the property sector is in focus. The negative gearing changes restrict deductions to newly built homes from July 2027, with existing properties grandfathered until sold. That is a meaningful structural shift, but it is 13 months away from even opening the transmission channel.
A-REITs: the cleanest market read
The instrument most directly exposed here is the S&P/ASX 200 A-REIT Index (ASX: XPJ).
| Metric | Detail |
|---|---|
| Budget eve close | Approximately 1,542 |
| 52-week high | 1,975 |
| Main sensitivity | RBA rate path |
Why the XPJ reaction needs a closer look
The XPJ’s major constituents respond to different Budget levers.
Focused on logistics and industrial property. Limited direct residential policy exposure.
Exposed through broader property and consumer conditions.
More directly in frame due to significant residential development pipelines.
More directly in frame due to significant residential development pipelines.
The key point
The demand impulse from the negative gearing change is delayed and conditional on the new-build pipeline actually accelerating. There is also a significant second-order effect sitting in the banking sector. The big four Australian banks carry approximately 45 to 50% of their total loan books in residential mortgages. Any policy-driven shift in property transaction volumes, up or down, flows into their book quality. That linkage is worth keeping in mind when reading any Budget-related move in the financials sector.
This Budget may be widening the K, a dispersion pattern where sectors diverge sharply rather than moving together.
On the upper arm: Energy producers, critical minerals processors, and logistics-focused names with hard assets, pricing power, and direct government capital flowing their way.
On the lower arm: Residential-exposed REITs, property developers, and rate-sensitive financials facing the same RBA pressure that existed before the Budget, with no near-term policy relief.
Dispersion, the spread in returns between winners and losers within the same broad index, tends to rise in environments like this. The key question is whether the XPJ moves as a whole, or whether the constituent spread between names like GMG and MGR begins to widen meaningfully.
The K-shaped consumer and CFD signals
Sector dispersion is reshaping how traders read market momentum. Explore how the K-shaped economy is creating new opportunities and risks for CFD positions in 2026.
The impacts that have not shown up yet
The tax changes for workers, including an A$250 Working Australians Tax Offset and an A$1,000 instant tax deduction, are back-loaded to the 2027-28 financial year. If the market is pricing a near-term consumer spending boost off the back of these measures, it may be getting ahead of the calendar. The Treasurer was explicit: the delay is deliberate, designed to avoid adding to the near-term inflation problem.
That is a reasonable fiscal call. It also means the retail and discretionary sectors may not see the consumer lift as quickly as some initial reads implied.
| Sector | Budget driver | Market read | Watch for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Energy and fuel security | A$10 billion Fuel Security Reserve, critical minerals incentives | Supported | Capital deployment timeline, oil price follow-through |
| Critical minerals and mining | Critical Minerals Strategic Reserve, Future Made in Australia | Conditionally positive | Processing contracts, global demand signals |
| Property and construction | Negative gearing restricted to new builds from July 2027 | Delayed effect | Pre-announcement transaction volumes, developer guidance |
| Retail and consumer discretionary | A$250 tax offset and A$1,000 instant deduction from 2027-28 | Back-loaded | Consumer confidence May print, credit card spending data |
| Banks and financials | CGT reform, negative gearing shift, rate environment | Mixed | Mortgage book composition, investment property exposure |
| Healthcare and aged care | NDIS reforms with A$37.8 billion in savings, care sector funding | Neutral to cautious | NDIS participant impact, service provider margins |
The sceptic's corner
Before acting on any Budget-driven market reaction, three questions are worth asking. Not because scepticism is always right, but because the Budget has a way of generating confident narratives that look less convincing by the end of the following week.
Three questions before you move
Is this move driven by the Budget, or was it already in motion?
The AUD was already at 0.7231 before Chalmers spoke, supported by three RBA rate hikes and a broad commodity tailwind. Some of what looks like a Budget reaction may simply be momentum that was already in place. Momentum and catalyst are not the same thing.
How much benefit reaches corporate earnings?
Announced spending and deployed spending are two different events, often separated by procurement processes, legislative steps and delivery timelines. Some of the Budget’s biggest measures, including fuel security capital, critical minerals incentives and construction stimulus, run on multi-year schedules. Pricing them as if they are immediate is a common mistake.
If the RBA does not play along, does the whole thesis change?
A Budget that adds demand stimulus into an economy where the RBA is already tightening is not straightforwardly bullish. The central bank moves independently. Its May statement was clear: inflation is likely to stay above the 2–3% target range for some time. If the June decision tilts further toward restraint, some Budget tailwinds may become headwinds, particularly for rate-sensitive sectors like property, REITs and growth stocks.
Catalyst roadmap: what to monitor and when
The Budget does not exist in isolation. Two data windows before the next RBA decision could easily overshadow it or amplify it. Here is how the scenarios map out.
Next two weeks: consumer confidence and RBA minutes
Two data points land before the end of May. RBA meeting minutes are released on 19 May at 11:30am AEST, the first official post-Budget communication from the central bank. The May consumer confidence print follows in the same week. Together, they offer the first read on whether the fiscal message is landing and whether the RBA is acknowledging the spending impulse.
Minutes are neutral and confidence holds steady. Budget detail is digested without drama. AUD/USD consolidates near 0.7230. XPJ stays range-bound near 1,542.
Minutes flag easing concern and confidence lifts. Retail and consumer discretionary names benefit. AUD tests resistance toward 0.7250 to 0.7400.
Minutes are hawkish and confidence weakens on fuel and rate pressure. Rate-sensitive sectors, including REITs and banks, may give back early Budget gains.
Next 30 days: CPI and the RBA decision
The monthly CPI release on 27 May at 6:00pm AEST is the most consequential single print before the RBA meets on 15 and 16 June, with the decision due at 2:30pm AEST on 16 June. The prior annual reading was 4.6%. These two events together may tell us far more about the durability of any post-Budget market move than the Budget itself.
CPI softens modestly. RBA holds at 4.35%. Market shifts focus to data rather than fiscal policy. AUD and ASX respond to the print, not the Budget.
CPI surprises lower. Rate cut expectations pull forward. Budget consumer stimulus looks more meaningful. Risk appetite improves across the ASX. XPJ may recover toward 1,585 to 1,600 resistance.
CPI surprises higher. A fourth RBA hike comes into view. Fiscal stimulus becomes a headwind, not a tailwind. Property, REITs and growth names face renewed pressure. XPJ risks testing the 1,485 range low.
Disclaimer: The scenarios presented above are for educational purposes and general market commentary only. These are forward-looking projections based on current data as at 13 May 2026; price levels, interest rate expectations, and economic outcomes are subject to change without notice based on market volatility and upcoming data releases. These scenarios should not be interpreted as financial advice or specific trading recommendations.
Key levels to watch — ASX 200 · XPJ A-REITs · AUD/USD
Indicative levels only, sourced from TradingView and RBA data. ASX 200 and AUD/USD reflect confirmed 12 May 2026 closes. These are not trading signals or recommendations and should be assessed against individual circumstances and current market conditions. Past price behaviour does not guarantee future outcomes. Levels may shift materially around the 27 May CPI print and 16 June RBA decision.
The takeaway
The honest read is that the Budget’s biggest potential benefits are back-loaded or conditional. The fuel security commitment and the critical minerals agenda are immediate. The consumer tax relief and the property market changes are not. All of it sits inside an inflation and rate environment that the RBA, not the Treasurer, ultimately controls.
The next two data points that genuinely matter are the CPI print on 27 May and the RBA decision on 16 June. Watch those. The Budget set the scene. Those events may tell us whether the audience bought the story.
RBA 2026 playbook: What do markets watch in decision weeks?
Understand the critical indicators, from wage growth to unemployment, that dictate 2026 RBA sentiment. Learn to read the triggers that shift sector-wide momentum before the announcement settles.

This is the second part of the GO Markets VIX Playbook. The first piece covered the basics and explored what the VIX measures, what it does not, why traders watch it and where new traders most often misread it. If you skipped it, start there as the foundation matters.
For everyone else, here is the part where theory becomes process.
Knowing what the VIX is does not make decisions for you. A repeatable process does. The sections that follow turn that 101 understanding into a practical workflow. A focused watchlist that travels across regimes. Three scenario timeframes for thinking past the next headline. An if/then framework for pre-committing to reactions before the market forces one. Action points for before, during, and after a move. And a checklist that takes the emotion out of the moments when emotion is most expensive.
The goal is not to predict the next move. It is to be ready for the ones that matter.
The practical playbook
Move from understanding to a repeatable, scenario-based process.

What could happen next
The point of this section is not to predict. It is to practise scenario thinking across different time horizons.
Volatility tends to build into events and fade after
Stylised pattern around scheduled catalysts such as central bank decisions
Tactical
- —Track scheduled events and surprise headlines
- —Possible scenarios: range, sharp spike, slower grind higher
- —Action point: define what would change your view
Regime
- —Compare implied with realised volatility
- —Possible scenarios: continuation, transition higher
- —Action point: review position sizing for the regime
Structural
- —Central bank paths and inflation trajectories
- —Possible scenarios: low-vol, elevated, transition
- —Action point: stress-test process across regimes
The if/then playbook
Use these as templates for thinking, not as instructions. The point is to know your reaction before the market forces one on you.
VIX rises sharply on a single headline
Whether the move holds into the next session or fades
Initial reactions are often the noisiest part of the move
Price alerts on VIX and US500, plus the economic calendar
VIX stays unusually low for an extended period
Signs of complacency, narrow ranges, crowded positioning
Low-vol regimes can end abruptly when they end
TradingView charts comparing VIX with realised vol
S&P 500 falls and VIX does not rise meaningfully
Whether the decline is orderly rather than stress-driven
Divergences can resolve in either direction
Side-by-side charting with key levels marked
Major central bank meeting is within 48 hours
Spreads, liquidity, option-implied moves on related markets
Event risk can produce gaps and slippage
GO Markets economic calendar and pre-event watchlists
What a process actually looks like
Three windows of attention. Each one has a different question to answer.
Before watching the market
- •Define what you are watching and why
- •Mark recent VIX ranges and key S&P 500 levels
- •Check the economic calendar
- •Review margin and spread context
- •Decide what would invalidate your scenario
During the market move
- •Avoid reacting to the first headline alone
- •Watch for confirmation across related markets
- •Monitor spreads, especially around news
- •Avoid increasing risk impulsively
- •If the move is faster than your plan, slow down
After the move
- •Review what happened against your scenarios
- •Note where your read was useful and where it was not
- •Capture emotional mistakes honestly
- •Update your watchlist
- •Save annotated charts for future reference

Beginner checklist
Tick through this before any volatility-aware trade decision.
The VIX is a thermometer, not a crystal ball
Reading it well will not tell you which way the market is going, but it can tell you a great deal about how the market is feeling and how much movement is being priced in.
The practical next step is not to predict the next move. It is to build a process. New traders can start by adding the VIX, the US500, and a handful of related markets to a watchlist, setting alerts around key levels, reviewing upcoming events on the economic calendar, and practising scenario planning before using live capital.
Navigate the divergence
Mastering the VIX is just the first step. Combine volatility insights with our K-shaped market analysis to identify hidden opportunities where sector paths divide.
Frequently asked questions

Tuesday, 12 May 2026, at roughly 7:30 pm AEST, Treasurer Jim Chalmers will stand up in Canberra and deliver the 2026-27 Federal Budget. According to Budget.gov.au, that is when the Budget is officially released, with the Budget papers going live online at the same time.
But this is not just another Budget night.
The Treasurer is putting together a fiscal plan while rates are moving higher, not lower. That is what makes this one feel different. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) lifted the cash rate to 4.35 per cent on 5 May, its third straight hike this year, in an 8 to 1 vote.
That is the part Australian market participants may not want to overlook.
Countdown to the 2026–27 Budget
Treasurer delivers speech Tuesday, 12 May 2026 at 7:30 pm AEST
Budget basics in plain English
The Federal Budget is basically the government’s plan for the year ahead. It sets out how much it expects to spend, tax and borrow, along with its forecasts for growth and inflation.
Markets usually care less about the big speech and more about the details buried in the papers. Think deficits, debt issuance, inflation assumptions, household relief, infrastructure spending and sector-specific surprises.
The Treasurer has already flagged a productivity package and a savings package. The Prime Minister has also shifted the broader message towards ‘national resilience’.
Those phrases may sound political, but they can matter for markets once the numbers are released.
The 2026–27 Budget catalyst watchlist
| Sector | Budget Catalyst | Key Tickers / CFDs | What to Monitor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail | Cost-of-living rebates, A$300 tax offset | Woolworths (WOW), Wesfarmers (WES) | Spending resilience |
| Energy | A$10bn Fuel Security package | Santos (STO), Woodside (WDS) | Infrastructure spend |
| Housing | CGT/negative gearing tweaks | REA Group (REA), CBA, NAB | Loan demand, REIT pricing |
| Materials | Infrastructure build-out | BHP, Rio Tinto (RIO) | Iron ore assumptions |
| FX & Rates | Fiscal stance & debt issuance | AUD/USD, AGB 10-year futures | RBA rate pricing |
Budget night scenarios
None of these are predictions, rather they are frameworks for thinking about how markets may initially react once the Budget papers are released.
Cost-of-living support
Rebates and targeted relief may give consumer-facing stocks some support. The other side is inflation risk. If markets see the package as too generous, bond yields could move higher.
Infrastructure and resilience
Construction and materials stocks could be sensitive to any new infrastructure commitments. If a fuel-security buildout is confirmed, related sectors may also get some attention.
Tax settings
Possible CGT discount changes or a return to indexation should be checked against the final papers. Markets may also watch for any flow-through to property-exposed stocks and REITs.
Fiscal restraint
A tighter Budget may be read as less inflationary, which could support bonds. Sectors that rely on government spending could face headwinds.
AUD reaction
The Aussie may move around RBA rate pricing after the Budget. That said, global drivers and commodity prices, especially oil and iron ore, can often outweigh local Budget flows.
A short pre-budget checklist
Confirm the release time and relevant Budget papers.
Note what may already be priced in, including CGT changes and fuel security.
Monitor AUD/USD reference levels, including 0.7180 and 0.7250.
Watch the 10-year government bond yield as macro confirmation.
Review position sizing and stops in the context of event risk.
Separate the political headline from the actual market implications.
Where it can go wrong
The Budget rarely writes the whole script. In fact, some measures may already be priced in. Offshore moves can dominate, details may be revised in coming weeks, and the RBA’s June meeting may matter more than any single line item.
Sector winners can still fall if valuations are stretched and the next inflation print may also overwrite the night’s narrative.
Takeaway
For newer Australian market participants, the key point is this: the Budget is a catalyst, not a crystal ball and the job is not to guess every measure. It is to watch how the Budget shifts expectations for rates, inflation, government borrowing, household income and company earnings.
That is the chain that moves prices, often well after the speech is over.
Join us on Wednesday morning for GO's reeaction and what it means for the Aussie dollar, the ASX and your trading.
Track the next catalyst
From CPI prints to RBA meetings, stay ahead of the volatility. Map the calendar and track AUD/USD or the ASX 200.
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