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What are the market drivers for APAC in May 2026?
GO Markets
28/4/2026
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Asia-Pacific markets start May with a more complicated macro backdrop than earlier in 2026. Regional growth has shown resilience, but higher energy prices are testing inflation expectations, trade balances and policy flexibility across fuel-importing economies.

For traders, the month's focus is likely to sit across three linked areas.

China Focus

Activity data

April CPI, PPI and purchasing managers' index (PMI)

Japan Focus

BOJ signals

Corporate goods prices and April CPI

Australia Focus

RBA decision

Statement on Monetary Policy and April CPI

Main Regional Risk

Energy volatility

Trade-sensitive sentiment

China

China remains central to the May Asia-Pacific market drivers outlook because its data can influence commodity demand, regional equities and the Australian dollar. The April data round may help traders assess whether the early-year recovery is broadening or still reliant on production, exports and policy support.

Key Dates (AEST)
30
Apr
Official PMI
National Bureau of Statistics · 11:30 am AEST
Medium
11
May
CPI and industrial producer price index (PPI)
National Bureau of Statistics · 11:30 am AEST
High
18
May
April activity data
Industrial production, retail and property · 12:00 pm AEST
High
27
May
Industrial economic benefits
National Bureau of Statistics · 11:30 am AEST
Medium
What markets may look for
  • Whether CPI data suggest demand-led inflation or continued subdued household pricing power
  • Whether PPI data point to improving factory margins or cost pressure from energy and raw materials
  • Whether retail sales show a firmer household sector or continued reliance on production and exports
  • Whether property data continue to weigh on confidence, construction demand and local government revenue
Why China matters for the region

China data can influence sentiment toward Asian equities, iron ore, copper, energy markets and the Australian dollar. Stronger domestic demand may support commodity-linked sentiment, while softer retail or property figures may keep markets focused on policy support and downside growth risks.

Japan inflation and BOJ signals

Japan's May calendar is less about a fresh BOJ rate decision and more about how markets interpret the April policy meeting, inflation data and wage-sensitive price trends. That matters because Japanese government bond yields and the yen remain sensitive to any shift in policy normalisation expectations.

Key Dates (AEST)
07
May
Minutes of the March BOJ meeting
Bank of Japan · 8:50 am AEST
Medium
12
May
Summary of Opinions – April BOJ meeting
Most market-sensitive Japan event · 9:50 am AEST
High
15
May
Corporate goods price index
Tracks input cost inflation · 9:50 am AEST
Medium
22
May
National April CPI
Statistics Bureau · 9:30 am AEST
High
29
May
Tokyo May CPI
Leading indicator for national trends · 9:30 am AEST
High
What markets may look for
  • Whether the BOJ still sees conditions for gradual policy normalisation, or whether energy-driven inflation complicates the outlook.
  • Whether goods and services inflation remain consistent with the 2% inflation objective.
  • Whether corporate goods prices reflect energy cost pass-through into producer pricing.
  • Whether Tokyo CPI points to firm or easing near-term price pressure ahead of the June meeting.
Why Japan matters

Japan’s data can influence yen volatility, Japanese government bond yields and the Nikkei 225. A stronger inflation pulse may support expectations for tighter policy over time, but energy-driven inflation can also pressure households and corporate margins. That balance may keep yen and equity reactions data-dependent.

Australia and the RBA decision

Australia has one of the clearest domestic policy events in the region in May. The RBA's Monetary Policy Board meets on 4 and 5 May, with the decision statement and Statement on Monetary Policy due at 2:30 pm AEST on 5 May. The Governor's media conference follows at 3:30 pm AEST.

Key Dates (AEST)
29
Apr
March CPI
Final read before RBA decision · 11:30 am AEST
High
05
May
RBA decision and Statement on Monetary Policy
Key domestic volatility event · 2:30 pm AEST
High
19
May
Minutes of the May RBA meeting
Reserve Bank of Australia · 11:30 am AEST
Medium
27
May
April CPI
First read on energy pass-through · 11:30 am AEST
High
What markets may look for
  • Whether the RBA gives more weight to inflation persistence or household demand risks in its decision statement.
  • Whether the Statement on Monetary Policy adjusts inflation, growth or labour market assumptions from the February update.
  • Whether April CPI confirms or challenges the inflation narrative after the May decision.
  • Whether labour conditions remain firm enough, with unemployment at 4.3% in March, to keep services inflation in focus.
Why Australia matters

Australia’s May data may influence AUD/USD, ASX 200 rate-sensitive sectors and short-end bond yields. A firmer inflation profile could support expectations for a restrictive RBA stance, while softer activity or household signals may limit how far markets price additional tightening. For index CFDs and forex CFDs, this is the highest-signal domestic event of the month.

Regional swing factors

Energy remains the main cross-market risk for May. Higher oil and gas prices can lift inflation, widen trade gaps and reduce policy space, particularly for economies dependent on imported fuel such as Japan, South Korea and parts of South-East Asia.

Regional themes to watch

ASEAN purchasing managers' index releases may indicate whether manufacturing momentum is broadening or losing speed. The Australian dollar, New Zealand dollar and Asian FX may remain sensitive to China data and global risk appetite. Iron ore and energy prices may influence Australia and China-linked equities. The RBA, BOJ and People's Bank of China face different inflation and growth trade-offs, and energy supply concerns may continue to shape inflation expectations and risk sentiment across the region.

Key watchlist

01

Top China Data Point

18 May activity data, particularly retail sales and property indicators

02

Top Japan Event

12 May BOJ Summary of Opinions from the April meeting

03

Top Australia Event

5 May RBA decision and Statement on Monetary Policy

04

Main Regional Wildcard

Energy price volatility linked to Middle East developments

05

Most Sensitive Market

AUD/USD, given its link to China demand and RBA repricing risk

06

Key Condition Shift

Evidence that inflation pressure is becoming persistent rather than mainly energy-led

Bottom Line

May’s Asia-Pacific calendar gives markets several points to reassess the region’s inflation, growth and policy mix. China data may shape commodity and risk sentiment, while Japan’s inflation signals and the RBA decision will guide rate pricing.

Energy remains the primary regional risk. If inflation pressure appears more persistent rather than energy-led, markets will become increasingly sensitive to central bank communication and yield repricing.

ASIA SESSION IN FOCUS

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