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The cash rate playbook: How traders can prepare for central bank decisions
GO Markets
8/5/2026
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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.

Important This article is general market commentary and education only. It does not constitute personal financial advice. Trading CFDs carries significant risk and may not be suitable for everyone.
Part 01

The 101 explainer

Build a clear, foundational understanding before going anywhere near a setup.

The Basics

What the cash rate is, in plain English

The cash rate is the interest rate that commercial banks charge each other for overnight, unsecured loans. The cash rate target is the level a central bank officially sets to steer that market.

In Australia, the RBA sets the cash rate target to manage inflation and employment. While the names vary, each acts as an anchor for the following equivalents:

  • United States: Federal Funds Rate
  • United Kingdom: Bank Rate
  • Eurozone: Main Refinancing Rate
  • New Zealand: Official Cash Rate

A simple way to think about it is as the wholesale price of money. When that wholesale price rises, the retail prices linked to it, such as mortgage rates, business loans, savings rates and bond yields, often move higher too. When it falls, borrowing costs across the economy tend to ease.

For traders, this is the macro anchor. It is not just a number on an economic calendar; it influences currencies, indices, commodities, and yield-sensitive stocks.

Where the world's major policy rates sit in May 2026

Headline cash rate equivalents at major central banks, expressed in per cent.

Illustrative
4.35% 3.75% 3.50-3.75% 2.25% 2.15% 0.75% RBA Australia BoE UK Fed US RBNZ NZ ECB Eurozone BOJ Japan

Source. Reserve Bank of Australia, US Federal Reserve, Bank of England, European Central Bank, Bank of Japan and Reserve Bank of New Zealand official statements, figures as at May 2026. Educational illustration.

Why It Matters

Why the cash rate matters more than new traders expect

Central bank decisions are among the most closely watched events on the market calendar. That is because one rate decision can influence several markets at once, from currencies and bond yields to share indices, commodities and the cost of holding leveraged positions overnight.

It affects more than currencies

For CFD traders, this matters for two main reasons. First, leverage can magnify both gains and losses when markets are volatile. Around a central bank decision, price can move quickly, spreads can widen and risk controls become especially important.

It can change holding costs

Second, the swap or holding cost on a CFD position is linked to the underlying cash rate. When rates change, the cost of carrying a position overnight may also change. For example, a pair like AUD/JPY can behave differently when the yield gap between Australia and Japan is wide compared with when it is narrow.

Markets can reprice quickly

New traders often underestimate how fast markets can react. A central bank can shift expectations with one sentence in a statement or press conference.

Markets do not wait for the next quarterly review. They often adjust as soon as the message changes.

Vocabulary

The key terms to know

You do not need to memorise every term in this list. These are the ones that come up most often around cash rate decisions.

Cash rate target

The interest rate level set by a central bank to anchor the economy.

Basis points (bps)

1bp = 0.01%. A 25bps move is a 0.25% change in rates.

Repricing

Markets adjusting expectations instantly after new info.

Hawkish vs Dovish: Hawkish leans toward higher rates (supports currency); Dovish leans toward lower rates (weighs on currency).

Yield Differential: The rate gap between two economies that drives capital flows.

Carry trade

Investing in high-yield via low-yield borrowing.

Risk-on/off

Market mood favouring growth vs safe-havens.

Trimmed Mean

Inflation measure that filters out volatile price swings.

Swap or Rollover: The overnight interest charge/credit for leveraged positions. Watch for triple swaps on Wednesdays which account for weekend settlement.

Position Sizing

What a 25 bps move may cost you

Basis points can sound abstract until you connect them to position size. Here is a simplified way to show why a small percentage move can matter for a CFD trader. A standard one-lot position in major FX is 100,000 units of the base currency and a 25 bps shift in the underlying cash rate is 0.25% per year.

The point is not the exact cents. It is that small-sounding percentage changes can compound on leveraged positions held for weeks or months.

Position size Annual exposure to a 25 bps shift Approximate daily impact
Standard lot, 100,000 units About 250 units About 0.68 units
Mini lot, 10,000 units About 25 units About 0.07 units
Micro lot, 1,000 units About 2.50 units About 0.01 units

Note. Figures are illustrative and shown in the quote currency of the pair. Educational illustration only.

How it works in real market conditions

A central bank decision is rarely just about the rate change itself. The market reaction is shaped by three layers: the decision, the statement, and any press conference or projections.

On 5 May 2026, the RBA raised the cash rate to 4.35%. While the hike was the headline, the statement and subsequent press conference provided the context that allowed markets to reprice bond yields and currency pairs in real time.

AUD/USD often spikes, fades, then trends after a rate decision

Stylised intraday reaction in the first 90 minutes around a hawkish RBA surprise.

Illustrative
0.6740 0.6680 0.6620 Decision released Initial spike First reaction fades Trend resumes T-15 T+0 T+15 T+30 T+45 T+60 Minutes from decision release

Source. Stylised illustration based on typical post-decision price behaviour. Educational purposes only. Liquidity can shift quickly: In the first 5 to 15 minutes after a decision, spreads can widen and fills can slip. High-frequency systems can digest language faster than humans, and mean reversion is common before a clearer trend emerges.

Market Dynamics

How central banks ripple across assets

Cash rate decisions rarely affect one market in isolation. They trigger a domino effect through currencies, yields, and volatility at varying speeds.

This kind of sector dispersion is not just an equities story. The same monetary tightening can produce sharply different outcomes across consumer segments, business sizes and parts of the wider economy, a dynamic sometimes called a K-shaped economy.

Major FX pairs

AUD/USD, EUR/USD, and JPY crosses respond directly to yield differentials.

Short-end yields

The 2-year government bond often acts as a leading indicator for currency moves.

Stock indices

High rates discount future earnings, weighing heavily on growth and tech names.

Gold & safe havens

Bullion reacts to real yields and the USD; hawkish shifts usually pressure gold prices.

Energy markets

Prices feed into inflation expectations, creating a feedback loop for central bank policy.

Market dispersion

When index components move in opposite directions following a rate change.

A tightening cycle can split the ASX 200

Illustrative

Stylised illustration of sector dispersion through a tightening cycle, with index levels rebased to 100.

Finan. Tech M+0 M+9 M+15

Source. Stylised illustration based on typical sector behaviour during tightening cycles. Outcomes vary by cycle. Educational purposes only.

The Beginner Trap

What many new traders miss

Markets react to the gap between expectations and reality. A hike that is fully priced in can lead to a falling currency; a hold with hawkish guidance can trigger a rally. The chart is only one part of the story. The setup may look simple, but the risk rarely is.

"Success in these events comes from understanding what is already priced in, and what would change the view if it does not play out that way."

Common mistakes to avoid

• Trading headlines: The initial print is often misleading. Wait for the second wave (statement/press conference).

• Binary leverage: Volatility hits stops harder. Scale risk down into known event risks.

• Chasing moves: Entering late usually means buying exhaustion. Wait for clear retracements.

• Narrative vs. trade: A clear story doesn't guarantee a setup. Ask: "What is already in the price?"

• Indicator myopia: No single signal captures global flows. Watch yields and cross-asset confirmation.

• No Invalidation: Without a clear "I am wrong" level, traders hold losing positions far too long.

Next Strategic Step

Master the volatility cycle

Understanding how the cash rate moves the market is only half the battle. Learn how to read the "Fear Gauge" to identify when volatility creates high-probability entry points.

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