
RBA Hikes to 4.35% for Third Consecutive Time as Bullock Warns 'No Way Out' of Oil-Driven Inflation
Australia's central bank delivers 25bp increase despite recession risks, citing Iran war fallout and persistent capacity pressures

The Reserve Bank of Australia raised its cash rate to 4.35% on May 5, marking the third consecutive hike in 2026 as Governor Michele Bullock warned Australians are 'poorer' from the Iran conflict's oil shock. Markets price further tightening amid stagflation fears.
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) delivered a widely anticipated 25-basis-point interest rate increase on Tuesday, lifting the cash rate to 4.35% from 4.10% — the third consecutive hike in 2026 and a return to the cycle peak last seen in 2024.
The decision, announced at 2:30 PM AEST (4:30 AM UTC), came despite warnings from the RBA's own economic forecasts that the move risks pushing Australia toward recession. Governor Michele Bullock acknowledged the harsh reality facing households but said the central bank had "no choice" but to act on surging cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation driven by the Middle East conflict.
Split Decision Amid 'Stagflationary Shock'
The rate hike was not unanimous: eight board members voted in favor while one dissented, arguing rates should remain on hold. The RBA does not identify individual board members in its statements.
"We are poorer and there is no way out of that," Bullock said at a press conference following the decision. "These interest rate rises are not going to do anything for inflation in the next six months. That's done and dusted."
The statement of monetary policy cited capacity pressures in the domestic economy and the accelerating impact of the US-Israel war on Iran, which has sent crude oil prices surging above $114 per barrel. Australian inflation jumped to 4.6% in March — its highest level since 2023 — driven largely by soaring fuel costs despite a temporary government fuel excise cut.
Inflation Forecast to Peak at 4.8%
Under the RBA's baseline scenario, which assumes a relatively swift resolution to the Strait of Hormuz crisis, consumer price growth is forecast to peak at 4.8% in the June quarter, up from the pre-war estimate of 4.2%. Economic growth is expected to halve to just 1.3% for 2026, with the oil supply shock shaving half a percentage point off GDP.
Unemployment is projected to rise to 4.7% from the current 4.3%, but the RBA insisted Australia would avoid a technical recession under its baseline forecast. However, the central bank modeled two "adverse scenarios" involving a prolonged conflict. Under the more pessimistic version, annual growth could slow to below 0.5% and unemployment could push above 5%, significantly raising recession risk.
Governor Warns of 'Second-Round Effects'
Bullock emphasized that rate hikes were aimed not at combating the direct impact of oil prices — which are beyond the RBA's control — but at preventing second-round effects where businesses pass on cost increases and workers demand higher wages to compensate.
"Higher costs get embedded into price and wage-setting decisions," she warned. "These second-round effects could lead to even higher and persistent inflation, and if so, would require even more tightening in monetary policy to get inflation under control."
The RBA left the door open to further rate increases, stating it will "do what it considers necessary" to return inflation to the 2-3% target band. Market pricing currently implies one additional 25bp hike by year-end, though Westpac is forecasting two more increases in June and August, which would take the cash rate to 4.85%.
Market Reaction: AUD Falls Despite Hawkish Tone
In a classic "buy the rumor, sell the news" response, the Australian dollar (AUD/USD) initially rallied to 0.72 USD — its highest level since April 2022 — before reversing sharply. By the close, AUD/USD had fallen 0.4% to 0.7142 as traders interpreted the RBA's language as signaling a potential pause after this hike.
The ASX 200 closed down 0.2% at 8,680 points, marking a 20-day low. Australian bond yields rose, with the 10-year Treasury pushing past 5% as markets reassessed inflation risks.
IG market analyst Tony Sycamore noted the RBA's language was "noticeably firmer" compared to March. "The Middle East shock, which was framed merely as an uncertainty last month, is now being treated as a clear, near-term inflationary impulse already feeding directly into the data," he said.
Political Fallout Ahead of Federal Budget
The rate hike lands just one week before Treasurer Jim Chalmers delivers the federal budget on May 12. Chalmers said the Australian economy was "hostage" to decisions made in Washington and Tehran, adding that the government would "play a helpful role, not a harmful role" in fighting inflation.
Opposition Treasury spokesperson Tim Wilson blamed government spending for persistent inflation, arguing: "We need the government to stop the spending binge, stop borrowing debt, stop pouring petrol on the inflation fire."
Bullock pushed back gently on fiscal policy, warning that government relief measures could complicate the RBA's task if not "targeting where it's most needed." She noted: "The extent to which the government make up the shortfalls for households by giving them more money, it makes it harder to dampen demand."
Household Impact: $2,657 More Per Year
For Australian borrowers with an average home loan of $736,259, the three consecutive rate hikes in 2026 will add approximately $2,657 per year in mortgage repayments, according to Finder analysis. A $600,000 mortgage will see monthly payments rise by $91 from this latest hike alone, totaling $272 in additional monthly costs since the start of the year.
Commonwealth Bank and Macquarie Bank have already confirmed they will pass on the full 0.25 percentage point increase to variable home loan rates, effective mid-May.
What Traders Should Watch Next
Markets will now focus on incoming economic data to gauge the likelihood of a fourth consecutive hike at the June 16 RBA meeting. Key releases include:
- Westpac Consumer Confidence (May 12)
- Federal Budget (May 12)
- Labour Force Report for April (May 19)
- CPI for April (May 27)
- Q1 GDP (June 3)
The rates market is currently pricing just 5 basis points of tightening for June, with the next full 25bp hike expected in September. However, the CAMA RBA Shadow Board — an independent group of economists — estimates a 70% probability that rates will need to rise further over the next six months.
For AUD/USD traders, key support sits at 0.7100, while resistance lies at 0.7250. A sustained break below 0.71 could signal a deeper correction if the RBA's hawkish rhetoric fades or if US economic data strengthens the dollar further. Conversely, any escalation in the Iran conflict that drives crude oil higher could reignite safe-haven flows and pressure commodity currencies including the Aussie.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.