Louise Bedford is an Author, Trading Mentor, Co-Founder of ( Trading Game ), and Founder of Talking Trading. With a penchant for psychology and mindset, Louise is one of the longest standing mentors in the trading business – weathering all the fads that have passed through the industry. In this episode we covered: What Talking Trading and Trading Game are Deprogramming yourself and Imposter Syndrome Dealing with people’s presumptions How she began teaching Positive mindset and dealing with negativity
Margin Call Podcast - S2 E9: Louise Bedford | Co-Founder of Talking Trading
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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.
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
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.
A short pre-budget checklist
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.

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.
When one rate decision changes the market mood
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.

Cada vez que los mercados se ponen nerviosos, un acrónimo de tres letras empieza a aparecer en los titulares y en las salas de trading: el VIX. Lo verás identificado como el medidor del miedo, el índice del miedo o simplemente como "la vol". Para los traders que van empezando, puede sentirse como un número para iniciados que todo el mundo parece seguir, pero que pocos se detienen a explicar.
Aquí está el detalle que muchos traders primerizos pasan por alto: el VIX no es una predicción de hacia dónde irá el mercado. Es una lectura de cuánto movimiento espera el mercado en el futuro cercano. Esa distinción parece sutil, pero cambia por completo la forma en que debe usarse este dato.
Este Playbook desglosa el VIX para traders de nivel principiante a intermedio bajo. La Parte 1 explica qué es y cómo funciona. La Parte 2 convierte ese conocimiento en un proceso práctico basado en escenarios que puedes utilizar para prepararte, observar y gestionar tu riesgo.

