Australia's consumer price index showed a modest deceleration in February 2026 but left core pressures elevated, a combination that complicates Reserve Bank policy normalization. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) release reported on March 25, 2026 and summarized by Investing.com, headline CPI increased 0.4% month-on-month in February and eased to 3.3% year-on-year, down from 3.5% in January (ABS, Mar 25, 2026). The ABS trimmed mean — a widely watched measure of underlying inflation — printed 4.1% year-on-year in February, little changed from January and materially above the RBA's 2–3% target band. With the RBA cash rate at 4.35% as of March 2026, these data create a policy conundrum: inflation momentum is slower than late-2024 peaks but still well above the central bank's target range.
Context
The February print follows a sequence of monthly releases in 2025–26 where headline inflation has oscillated between moderate deceleration and renewed price pressures driven by services and housing costs. Headline CPI at 3.3% y/y now sits below the 12-month high of 5.1% recorded in mid-2024, illustrating a meaningful disinflation trend since the aftermath of pandemic-era supply disruptions. Nevertheless, the trimmed mean at 4.1% remains stubbornly high; historically, Australian trimmed-mean prints above 4% have preceded prolonged periods where the RBA maintained restrictive settings to bring inflation back into the 2–3% range.
From an international context, Australia's headline inflation compares to other advanced economies where central banks are similarly navigating sticky core inflation: the euro area and the United Kingdom have recorded varying disinflation timelines, while the United States continues to show a slower-than-expected descent in core services inflation. The divergence between headline and underlying measures in Australia mirrors patterns seen in peers, where volatile energy and food components reduce headline readings while services and wages support core inflation.
Policy signaling from the RBA in the weeks before the ABS release emphasized data dependency; markets priced only a modest probability of further tightening after March 2026. That pricing reflects both the fall in headline CPI and the recognition that underlying measures such as the trimmed mean and private-sector wage growth remain sources of upside risk. The ABS data therefore come at a delicate moment for the RBA's forward guidance and the pricing of rate expectations in money markets.
Data Deep Dive
The ABS reported three specific datapoints that warrant attention. First, headline CPI rose 0.4% month-on-month in February 2026 (ABS, Mar 25, 2026), a sequential pace that implies still-positive near-term consumer-price momentum. Second, on a year-on-year basis headline inflation eased to 3.3% (from 3.5% in January), showing that some of the transitory upward pressure from energy and one-off items has waned. Third, the trimmed mean — considered a better indicator of persistent inflation — printed 4.1% y/y, essentially unchanged from the prior month and implying that underlying price pressures are not abating at the same pace as headline measures (ABS, Mar 25, 2026).
Breaking the components down, the ABS showed services inflation and housing-related costs continue to be the dominant contributors to the trimmed mean. Services inflation, including hospitality and personal services, has been running near 4.5%–5.0% y/y over the last six months, while housing and rents have tracked higher-than-target growth because of constrained supply and strong rental markets in major metropolitan areas. By contrast, volatile components such as fuel and international travel reflected price falls that pulled down the headline series but made little dent in core readings.
A cross-check against labour market indicators underscores the inflation story. Wage measures, including the Wage Price Index and private-sector settlement data through late 2025, indicate year-on-year growth in the high 3% range—insufficient on their own to explain a 4% trimmed mean but consistent with sustained services-price pressure where labour is a larger share. The relationship between wages and services inflation is a critical transmission mechanism for the RBA: if wage growth accelerates materially, the RBA would likely perceive a more entrenched inflation path.
Sector Implications
Financial markets reacted to the print with a subdued volatility profile: short-duration government yields retraced a small portion of the March tightening, and the Australian dollar slipped modestly against the US dollar on the day of the release. For domestic fixed-income investors, the persistence of a 4.1% trimmed mean implies that the yield curve will likely stay biased toward pricing in a longer period of restrictive real rates compared with pre-2024 norms. Bank lending spreads and mortgage repricing cycles should be monitored closely—sectors with high exposure to variable-rate mortgages remain vulnerable to sticky core inflation that sustains higher policy rates.
For equities, sectors with pricing power—utilities, consumer staples, and certain aspects of the energy sector—may better withstand margin pressure from elevated input costs. Conversely, highly levered small-cap firms and parts of the retail sector that compete on price sensitivity could see margin compression if wages and services inflation remain persistent. Real assets such as residential property and infrastructure assets indexed to inflation may continue to attract capital if investors expect an extended period of above-target core inflation.
From a fiscal perspective, higher-than-target underlying inflation complicates budget planning for wage-indexed entitlements and social transfers. State governments, which manage much of the housing and rental policy levers, will face pressure to address supply-side constraints that have been feeding into shelter inflation—measures that, if enacted slowly, will have limited near-term disinflationary impact.
Risk Assessment
Upside risks to inflation remain substantive. A faster-than-expected recovery in consumption, an acceleration in wage growth beyond the current high-3% range, or renewed commodity-price shocks could push the trimmed mean higher. Conversely, sharper-than-expected falls in global energy prices or an unexpected slowdown in household spending—driven by higher mortgage service costs—could lower headline and core metrics quicker than current market pricing expects. The balance of these risks is asymmetric: entrenched services inflation and rent dynamics mean that downside moves would need to be decisive to shift the RBA decisively.
Monetary-policy transmission risks also exist. If the RBA remains restrictive for longer to address the 4.1% trimmed mean, there is a risk of a growth-hit scenario where unemployment edges up, feeding back into slower wage growth and the eventual descent of inflation but at the cost of higher labour-market slack. Alternatively, an early easing based on headline disinflation could risk re-anchoring inflation expectations upward if core measures have not reliably turned.
Market-risk metrics—implied volatility in AUD interest-rate swaps and cross-asset flows—suggest investors are pricing a higher probability of policy persistence than a quick pivot. Scenario analysis shows that a 25bp further tightening maintained for six months materially raises bank funding costs and mortgage rates, while a series of cuts in late 2026 would require a marked decline in the trimmed mean toward the 3% area.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Our analysis identifies three non-obvious takeaways. First, the divergence between headline and trimmed-mean readings increases the probability that the RBA will focus on multi-month averages rather than single-month headline moves when setting policy, which supports a bias toward rate persistence. Second, Australia’s inflation dynamics are now more regionalized: services and rents in major metro areas are driving national core prints, so localized supply-side responses (zoning, supply incentives) could be more effective than broad macro adjustments. Third, investor expectations should incorporate a higher-for-longer real-rate environment while preparing for asymmetric outcomes—either a slow descent to the target band or a sharper correction if consumption weakens materially.
Institutional investors should revisit duration and credit allocations with a scenario lens that weights persistent core inflation more heavily than transient headline falls. For asset allocators, the path for real yields and currency volatility will be pivotal in setting risk premia across Australian-dollar liabilities and cross-border allocations. For more on cross-asset implications and tactical positioning, see our insights on interest-rate strategy and macro scenarios at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and our regional inflation briefing at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
Looking ahead, the ABS will publish additional data—wage-price measures and retail sales—that will either reinforce or temper the message from February CPI. If wages accelerate further in ensuing quarters, the RBA will likely prioritize inflation control over growth concerns. Conversely, a pronounced slowdown in household spending would give the RBA room to pivot, but that would likely be accompanied by higher unemployment and weaker growth.
Market pricing currently implies a modest probability of further tightening but a higher likelihood of rates remaining near current levels through much of 2026. Investors should monitor three indicators closely: sequential changes in the trimmed mean, quarterly wage releases (Wage Price Index), and rent/inflation dynamics in major cities. A consistent decline in the trimmed mean toward 3% would be the clearest signal that the inflation process is normalizing.
Bottom Line
February's CPI print (headline 3.3% y/y; trimmed mean 4.1% y/y; ABS, Mar 25, 2026) signals slower headline inflation but persistent core pressures that support a higher-for-longer policy view. Markets and policymakers will require several months of corroborating data before concluding that inflation is decisively on a downward trajectory.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: Could the RBA cut rates in 2026 if headline inflation continues to fall while the trimmed mean stays elevated?
A: A cut would require sustained declines in underlying measures, not just headline. Historically the RBA has relied on multi-month trends in the trimmed mean and wage indicators; a single or two-month fall in headline CPI would be insufficient. The central bank would also consider labour-market slack and forward inflation expectations before easing.
Q: How do Australian underlying inflation readings compare to peers?
A: Australia’s trimmed mean at 4.1% (Feb 2026) is higher than many G7 core measures and reflects stronger services and housing inflation; this places Australia in the cohort of advanced economies where services-driven inflation remains stickier. For portfolio decisions, that suggests a relatively higher real-rate outlook versus peers in the near term.
Q: What practical steps should institutional investors monitor over the next 90 days?
A: Track the next ABS releases on wages and retail sales, RBA minutes for guidance on balance-sheet and forward guidance changes, and monthly housing rental indicators in major cities. Divergences among these will be the decisive signal for duration, credit, and currency exposure.
