Payments System Board Update: November 2025 Meeting

Source: Airservices Australia

At its meeting today, the Payments System Board discussed a number of issues, including:

  • Financial market infrastructure regulatory reforms and resolution planning. The Board welcomed progress in operationalising powers to prevent or resolve a crisis at an Australian clearing and settlement facility. The Board discussed stakeholder feedback on draft guidance on the RBA’s crisis resolution powers. The guidance is expected to be published in December 2025.
  • Review of Merchant Card Payment Costs and Surcharging. Members discussed the stakeholder feedback and evidence received in response to the Consultation Paper published in July. In particular, the Board considered the relative merits of the various options on payment card surcharging. Members also discussed the extent to which interchange caps should be reduced, and whether commercial credit cards should attract higher interchange caps than consumer credit cards. Members noted feedback that there is a risk that a portion of the proposed interchange reductions would not be passed through to merchants in the short term without further regulatory intervention. As such, members discussed various options to promote competition and transparency in the acquiring market. After giving due consideration to the substantial body of information received during the consultation, the Board expects to publish its conclusions and an implementation timeline for any regulatory action by March 2026. The Board agreed that it was not in the public interest to further delay this review given the importance of the reforms being considered.
  • Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998: Members welcomed the recent amendments to the PSRA. There will be a public consultation in mid 2026 on the Board’s regulatory priorities, taking into account these amendments, technology development and innovation in the payments industry, and payments regulatory issues that extend beyond the Review of Merchant Card Payment Costs and Surcharging. The consultation would include efficiency, competitiveness and safety issues with mobile wallets, three party schemes, buy-now-pay-later providers and e-commerce platforms.
  • Assessment of the New Payments Platform. The Board reviewed the RBA’s 2025 assessment of the New Payments Platform (NPP) under the Prominent Payment Systems oversight regime. Efforts to promote effective governance and risk management remain a priority in light of industry’s intended migration of account-to-account payments to the NPP in the medium term.
  • The safety and resilience of Australia’s real-time gross settlement system. The Board received an update on progress against the recommendations from the March 2024 Assessment of the Reserve Bank Information and Transfer System (RITS). The update covered initiatives to strengthen the operational reliability of the RITS ecosystem and key areas of oversight focus including change management and cyber resilience. The Board acknowledged the continued progress and noted that the forthcoming full assessment in June 2026 will provide a comprehensive view of RITS’s observance of the Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures.
  • Advanced Encryption Standard (AES).The Board received an update on industry progress to enable the transition to AES for card payments in Australia. Members reiterated their strong support for industry efforts to ensure encryption standards continue to meet the high safety standards for card payments expected by the Australian public. The Board expects industry to progress migration with sufficient urgency to enable the readiness of AES for use by December 2030. The Board agreed to consult on using the RBA’s standard-setting powers under the PSRA to support the migration.
  • The annual review of compliance with card payments regulation. Members reviewed the compliance of card issuers and acquirers, and the designated card schemes, with the RBA’s interchange and surcharging standards and access regimes in 2024/25. There was assessed to be a high level of compliance with the RBA’s regulations.
  • Enhancing cross-border payments. Members discussed Australia’s progress towards achieving cheaper, faster, more transparent and more accessible cross-border payments under the G20 Roadmap. The Board recognised the payments industry’s ongoing efforts to transition to richer ISO 20022 payments messaging and adopt internationally harmonised requirements in the High Value Clearing System and the NPP by the end of 2027. It also observed growing use of the NPP’s International Payments Service, which enables incoming cross-border payments to be processed on a 24/7 basis. The Board will continue to monitor the industry’s implementation of these initiatives.

    The RBA is currently participating in the second phase of the Bank for International Settlement’s Project Mandala, which is investigating the automation of cross-border compliance processes.1 The RBA will also be examining options for enhancing wholesale cross-border payments in 2026, including through upgrades to RITS and further research on digital money innovations.

Visit to Solomon Islands for the PACER Plus Ministerial Meeting

Source: Australia Government Statements 2

Today, I will travel to Solomon Islands to represent Australia at the PACER Plus Ministerial Meeting (PPMM).

The PPMM marks five years since the Pacific Agreement on Closer Economic Relations (PACER) Plus began and is the region’s most modern framework for rules-based trade, driving regional economic integration.

As the region’s largest economic partner, Australia is proud to be a member.

This meeting will be an opportunity for PACER Plus Members to reinforce our commitment to rules-based trade and vision for free trade and investment across the region at a time of global uncertainty.

This will be my first visit to Solomon Islands as Assistant Minister for Pacific Island Affairs and follows my meeting with Prime Minister Jeremiah Manele last week to launch the $104 million Adamasia Cable.

Australia is Solomon Islands’ economic, trade, and development partner of choice. I look forward to engaging on skills and job growth, and, in the context of the 16 Days of Activism, highlighting our partnership to combat gender-based violence.

Australia is a partner that Solomon Islands can count on. We work hand in hand because we are a family who share an ocean and a future.

R M WILLIAMS WAY/WENEDI RD , SPALDING (Grass Fire)

Source: South Australia County Fire Service

Homes that have been built to withstand a bushfire, and are prepared to the highest level, may provide safety.

You may lose power, water, phone and data connections.

Fire crews are responding but you should not expect a firefighter at your door.

What you should do

  • Check and follow your Bushfire Survival Plan.
  • Protect yourself from the fire’s heat – put on protective clothing.
  • Tell family or friends of your plans.

If you are leaving

  • Leave now, don’t delay.
  • Roads may become blocked or access may change. Smoke will reduce visibility.
  • Secure your pets for travel.
  • If you become stuck in your car, park away from bushes, cover yourself, get onto the floor as the windows may break from the intense heat.

If you are not leaving – prepare to defend

  • Identify a safe place inside, with more than one exit, before the fire arrives. Keep moving away from the heat of the fire.
  • Bring pets inside and restrain them.
  • Move flammable materials such as doormats, wheelie bins and outdoor furniture away from your house.
  • Close doors and windows to keep smoke out.
  • If you have sprinklers, turn them on to wet the areas.
  • If the building catches fire, go to an area already burnt. Check around you for anything burning.

CFA welcomes millions in project grants

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

CFA is welcoming more than $22.6 million in grants for brigades and groups to share to purchase new equipment, helping to further protect their local communities.

The Victorian Government’s 2025/26 Volunteer Emergency Services Equipment Program (VESEP) funding was announced today, with dignitaries including CFA Chief Officer Jason Heffernan and local brigades.

The announcement took place at CFA’s District 15 Headquarters (HQ) in Wendouree who received VESEP funding in this year’s grants to purchase a new Breathing Apparatus (BA) support vehicle.

District 15 HQ brigade Captain Fabian McHoul said the new BA support vehicle would be a new addition to the brigade’s existing support vehicle.

“We’re a support brigade attending more than 50 support call-outs per year, particularly to fires where the need to refill and replace BA cylinders is required,” Fabian said.

“BA is important for maintaining firefighter safety when working in hazardous and toxic smoke conditions. With the urban spread growth in this area, the need for BA has increased.

“It will be a great to have this new asset for the brigade, and we welcome this announcement today.”

The new BA support vehicle cost around $104,000.[AS1] [LE2] 

The VESEP funding announced today has been spread across 168 projects which included a range of facility upgrades and replacement vehicles for brigades including 14 Medium tankers, 12 Ultralight tankers and 31 Field Command Vehicles (FCV).

CFA Chief Officer Jason Heffernan said VESEP grants help provide brigades with significant funding for vital equipment and facility improvements.

“This program provides $2 for every $1 of funding from the brigade thanks to the brigades’ incredible fundraising efforts and generosity of their local communities,” Jason said.

“The contribution from the government towards equipment means brigades have a great incentive to fundraise in their communities and apply for a VESEP grant.

“There are also Special Access Grants available to provide a further financial boost for brigades that face challenges with fundraising.”

The full list of successful applicants has been published on the Emergency Management Victoria website.

Submitted by CFA Media

Release of complete monthly Consumer Price Index

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

New figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed prices were steady in October but ticked up in annual terms.

Today’s annual result is higher than we would like but still much lower than what we inherited from our predecessors.

The flat monthly result in October was driven by falls in electricity and fuel prices, and a moderation in housing costs.

The tick up in annual terms in part reflects temporary factors such as the timing of state energy rebates and volatile items such as travel prices.

We know that households are still under pressure and that’s why our responsible cost of living relief is so important.

Headline inflation was 0.0 per cent in the month of October but up 3.8 per cent in through the year terms.

Underlying inflation was 3.3 per cent in the 12 months to October.

When we came to office, headline inflation was 6.1 per cent and climbing – but it has now moderated substantially, which has given the RBA confidence to cut interest rates three times this year.

Underlying inflation was hovering around five per cent but is now much lower.

Today marks the first time the ABS has released complete monthly CPI figures.

It’s an important change that will help inform decision‑making into the future.

Inflation remains persistent in many advanced economies, and there have been recent increases in inflation in the United States, New Zealand and Japan.

The global economy remains uncertain and people are still doing it tough, but Australia is well placed and well prepared to confront the challenges coming at us.

When we came to office, real wages were going badly backwards and had fallen for five quarters.

Last week’s wages data showed annual real wages have grown for eight consecutive quarters – the longest run of real wages growth in almost a decade.

Since Labor was elected, inflation is down, debt is down, real wages are growing, unemployment is low, and interest rates have fallen three times this year.

While we’ve made good progress on the economy together, we recognise the job is far from over because people are still under pressure, which is why we’re continuing to roll out responsible cost of living relief including tax cuts for every taxpayer, slashing student debt, cheaper medicines and more bulk billing.

Labor’s economic plan is all about helping with the cost of living at the same time as we modernise Australia’s economy to boost living standards.

We know the best way to improve living standards is to make our economy more productive and resilient and our budget more sustainable and that’s our focus.

Speech: How Developments in International Financial Markets Shape Financial Conditions in Australia

Source: Airservices Australia

I would like to begin by acknowledging the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the traditional custodians of the land we are meeting on today. I pay my respects to their Elders past and present. I also extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples joining us today.

It’s a privilege to be here at the Australian Securitisation Conference.

A key role of International Department at the RBA is to provide advice on developments in international financial markets to the Monetary Policy Board and to work with colleagues across the RBA to interpret what these developments mean for financial conditions in Australia.

The aim of my talk today is to provide a flavour of how we do this. I’ll recap some key developments in international financial markets over the year and then explain our framework for thinking about how these developments can affect financial conditions in Australia, focusing on the distinctive features of the Australian financial system that shape the transmission of global financial market shocks.

In the interest of time, I won’t cover other important international linkages, including economic transmission channels, where global financial conditions affect global activity that transmits to Australia, or the transmission of shocks during periods of financial stress or market dysfunction. These have been covered in other recent RBA publications and speeches.

The year in review

This year has certainly been eventful. The global financial system has been affected by a convergence of interrelated forces. Policy uncertainty has at times been extreme as the US administration has disrupted established policy norms (Graph 1). Concerns about global fragmentation have been heightened. But despite some bouts of volatility in markets, including in recent days, risk premia have been low, fuelled by optimism about AI, more supportive policy settings and as the more adverse scenarios for global growth have not materialised.

Graph 1

Central banks have eased policy rates cautiously …

Central bank policy rates are one of the most important determinants of global financial conditions. Almost all central banks in the major advanced economies reduced their policy rates in 2024 and 2025 as inflation eased from post-pandemic highs and labour markets cooled. Japan was the exception, gradually tightening monetary policy in response to inflationary pressures after decades of very low inflation. Most central banks have taken a cautious approach as they have navigated the extreme policy uncertainty and while inflation remains a little above their targets due to sticky services inflation. Market expectations are for further gradual policy easing in some advanced economies over 2026, most notably in the United States (Graph 2).

Graph 2

Central banks have also continued to run down their balance sheets, in a way designed not to impact financial conditions meaningfully. Some have concluded, or signalled they are close to concluding, this process. The US Fed recently announced it will end its balance sheet run-off in December. This reflected a judgement that reserves were nearing ‘ample’ levels, given signs of pressure in a range of US money market rates.

… amid concerns of increased global fragmentation.

The potential for global fragmentation has been a major theme of 2025. Over the second half of the 20th century and most of the 21st century to date, increasing global integration has supported growth in advanced and emerging economies. This was underpinned by policies that have made it easier for goods and services, capital and ideas to flow across borders.

However, support for such policies has been waning for a number of years in the United States and elsewhere, in large part because the gains were not always distributed evenly. Inequality, including between regions, and the post-pandemic surge in inflation, which reduced real incomes, has provided impetus to growing political polarisation and nationalism. At the same time, geopolitical tensions have been rising.

Protectionist policies have the potential to cause a retrenchment of global trade and capital flows that would undermine welfare globally. The risk of regulatory fragmentation across the international financial system has also been increasing, as jurisdictions pursue diverging regulatory priorities, including in banking and digital assets.

The good news is that a retrenchment of global trade and capital flows has been more of a fear than a reality in 2025, at least so far (Graph 3). Capital flows, including into the United States, remain high. Global supply chains have been surprisingly resilient and adaptable, perhaps drawing on the lesson of the pandemic. Effective US tariff rates, while still much higher than at the beginning of the year, are lower than originally feared in April. The AI infrastructure boom has also supported trade, and by more than many expected.

Graph 3

Questions have been raised about the US dollar’s ‘safe haven’ status …

The role of the US dollar in international markets has received some attention this year. Concerns about the US administration’s policies, including the potential for lasting damage to key institutions, have led some commentators to question whether the US dollar can maintain its longstanding ‘safe haven’ or reserve currency status. Typically, the US dollar strengthens when global aversion rises, but after the April tariff announcements, the US dollar depreciated, while US Treasury yields spiked and equities fell (Graph 4).

Graph 4

Overall, the concerns about the status of the US dollar seem to have been overstated, at least for now. There are currently no clear alternatives to the US dollar as the world’s dominant currency. While the US dollar has depreciated by 6 per cent on a trade-weighted basis over 2025, this was from a near historical high at the end of 2024. Much of the depreciation can be explained by standard macro determinants, including narrowing interest rate differentials between the United States and the rest of the world.

Foreign reserves of central banks and governments have not shown an accelerated move away from the US dollar in 2025. The US dollar’s share in official foreign exchange reserve portfolios continued to decline gradually this year, consistent with the trends of recent years (Graph 5). But the decline in 2025 is mostly explained by valuation effects from exchange rate movements. It has not reflected a generalised reallocation away from US dollar assets in reserve managers’ benchmarks.

Graph 5

There is also little evidence of a significant reallocation away from US dollar assets by other asset managers. Nevertheless, there is evidence that some market participants are looking to manage increased risks around the US dollar. Market reports and our own liaison indicate that some non-US asset managers have increased their hedging of US dollar assets even though it is relatively costly to do this when US interest rates are higher than elsewhere.

… and concerns about fiscal dynamics in some countries have put upward pressure on sovereign bond yields.

Fiscal dynamics have been in focus in a number of economies overseas. The cumulative impact of responses to the global financial crisis and the pandemic have left gross government debt ratios higher (Graph 6). In some countries, political polarisation is making it challenging to reach agreement on policies to put fiscal settings on a more sustainable path. Ageing populations, adaptation to the physical effects of climate change, and increased defence spending in response to geopolitical tensions will continue to add to fiscal pressures over coming years.

Graph 6

Partly reflecting fiscal challenges, ultra-long end bond yields and term premia have risen over 2025 in some countries (Graph 7). The investor base for ultra-long bonds has also been changing. Hedge funds are reportedly holding a larger share. While hedge funds contribute to greater market depth and efficiency in normal times, their use of leverage can amplify shocks. We saw this during the April market turmoil with the unwind of the so-called swap-spread trade that arose in anticipation of an easing of US bank regulation.

Graph 7

Depsite significant uncertainty, risk premia in global markets have been low …

Despite elevated policy uncertainty, market participants have been willing to accept very little compensation for risk. Equity prices have increased strongly in most advanced economies over 2025, and valuations have been high in the United States and Australia, despite some recent declines (Graph 8). Meanwhile, corporate bond spreads have been well below their long-term averages. Overall, market pricing suggests that investors haven’t placed much weight on the possibility of materially adverse outcomes for most of the year, except for a brief period after the April tariff announcements. However, volatility has increased somewhat in recent weeks.

Graph 8

Market optimism around AI, which has been tested a little of late, is one reason risk premia have been compressed. Other factors have been expansionary fiscal settings in some countries and more supportive monetary policy. Confidence also grew as worst-case scenarios around tariffs failed to materialise, along with generally better-than-expected corporate earnings, especially in the tech sector. In Australia, the recent decline in equity prices, which is larger than the decline in US equity prices, has coincided with an upwards revision in expectations for the cash rate and other domestic news.

The question of over-valuation in markets is a key one. With some asset valuations appearing very stretched, a reassessment of the risks or optimism around AI or corporate earnings, could see equity and corporate bond markets shift quickly from currently contributing to easier global financial to something less easy, and possibly even tight or disruptive.

… while gold prices have risen sharply.

Gold prices have been another big story in 2025. US dollar prices have increased by a staggering 54 per cent over the year to date to record highs – the fastest annual increase since 1979 (Graph 9).

Graph 9

What’s driving the increase? One factor is geopolitical tensions and the threat of sanctions. Central banks in some emerging markets have been increasing the share of gold in their reserves portfolio since Russia’s reserves were frozen in 2022 in response to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. This trend may have further to run, with emerging market central banks still having smaller allocations to gold than many of their advanced economy peers.

Gold is also often considered a hedge during times of global uncertainty. This year, concerns about global fragmentation, US policy risks, including tariffs and perceived threats to Fed independence, and fiscal sustainability in several economies may have added to that appeal. But this explanation is hard to square with still very low risk premia in financial markets and stable long-term inflation expectations.

There are also some clear signs of speculative buying, including significant retail buying via exchange traded funds and queues forming to buy physical gold.

How do global developments affect financial conditions in Australia?

So what does this mean for financial conditions in Australia? First, let me explain exactly what I mean by financial conditions. Financial conditions represent the cost and availability of finance for households and businesses to support economic activity. Conditions are ‘restrictive’ when the cost of finance is high enough to place downwards pressure on aggregate demand and ‘easy’ when the cost of finance is low.

Monetary policy works primarily through its influence on financial conditions. Yet, while important, the RBA’s cash rate is not the only influence on the cost of finance in Australia. Expectations for inflation and the path of central bank policy rates have an important bearing, along with the compensation that investors require for bearing risk.

As Assistant Governor Christopher Kent recently outlined, an assessment of whether conditions are restrictive or tight needs to be benchmarked to something. This is where the neutral interest rate comes in. The neutral rate is the conceptual equilibrium short-term interest rate that keeps growth at potential and inflation at target when no other shocks are hitting the economy. If the cash rate was held steady, but the neutral rate declined, then financial conditions would be tighter than otherwise, all else equal.

Developments in international markets have a significant influence on these determinants of financial conditions in Australia. Key channels of transmission include global influences on the neutral interest rate, spillovers from faster moving risk and term premia that are correlated across countries, and the exchange rate. I’ll now discuss each of these in turn.

Australia’s neutral interest rate is influenced by global and domestic factors.

In small open economies like Australia, the neutral rate is heavily influenced by international developments that affect the balance of saving and investment globally.

In recent decades, estimates of real neutral interest rates have fallen across advanced economies, including Australia (Graph 10). This fall reflected a secular rise in global saving that was unmatched by higher global investment.

Graph 10

A significant body of research has sought to explain why neutral rates fell. Explanations include the integration of high-saving fast-growing emerging markets into the international financial system, slower trend productivity growth, ageing populations, and rising inequality. Demand for safe assets also surged after the global financial crisis because of tighter financial regulation and while the long process of deleveraging dampened investment.

There is less consensus about the trajectory of neutral rates after the pandemic. Different approaches to estimating neutral rates provide different answers, underscoring the significant challenges in estimation. Some estimates have increased. This is the case for the estimates I’ve shown here, which are produced by James Morley from the University of Sydney and Benjamin Wong from Monash University. Estimates based on financial market pricing have increased by a little more. However, other commonly used approaches, based on macroeconomic models, show little to no increase.

The future trajectory of neutral rates is also uncertain. Factors that could push neutral rates higher include growing fiscal deficits, a decline in the demand for safe assets if there is a loosening of post-crisis regulation, or a sustained increase in productivity growth arising from AI. At the same time, many of the factors that depressed neutral rates before the pandemic have not gone away. Despite AI optimism, productivity growth outside the United States has remained weak, and there will be continued population ageing. The effects of AI on inequality are uncertain.

How greater global fragmentation could affect neutral rates is also ambiguous. While it could lower productivity growth, pulling neutral down, it could also restrict capital mobility from high-saving emerging markets, putting upward pressure on neutral rates in advanced economies like Australia.

Bringing this all together leads to the somewhat unsatisfactory conclusion: there is a lot of uncertainty about where neutral rates are and where they are going. What we can perhaps conclude, though, is that they have not fallen since the pandemic and may have even risen.

While the uncertainty may seem discouraging, it is still important to engage with, and in, research and analysis that help us to understand how neutral rates might be changing. Being slow to recognise international developments that might change Australia’s neutral rate is a potential source of error in monetary policy decision-making.

How much influence do international developments have on Australia’s neutral rate? That’s also very uncertain. Morley and Wong estimate that foreign shocks have explained about half of the variation in Australia’s neutral rate since the mid-2000s. They also find that estimates of the US neutral rate on its own is almost entirely sufficient to explain the global influences on neutral rates in Australia and in several other advanced economies.

The finding that the US neutral rate can explain most of the influence of global factors on Australia’s neutral rate is consistent with the United States’ central role in the international financial system. The US dollar accounts for more than half of foreign exchange reserves held by central banks, it is the dominant invoicing currency for international trade, and a reference point for pricing a wide range of financial instruments. Australia’s external assets and liabilities that are denominated in foreign currencies are overwhelmingly denominated in US dollars.

Risk and term premia in Australia move closely with those in other advanced economies.

Next, let me talk to the role of international spillovers into Australian financial conditions from faster moving risk and term premia. These premia are highly correlated across countries. In 2025, measures of equity risk premia, corporate spreads, and term premia in Australia moved closely with those other advanced economies (Graph 11).

Graph 11

The structure of Australia’s financial system means that risk and term premia have less influence on overall financial conditions …

However, the structure of our financial system means that developments in capital markets are less important for overall financial conditions in Australia than in some other economies like the United States.

Our financial system is dominated by banks, which account for around 95 per cent of household credit and two thirds of business debt, which means businesses’ borrowing costs are much more heavily influenced by bank lending rates than by the cost of capital market funding (Graph 12).

Graph 12

Another salient feature of Australia’s financial system is that stock market wealth is mostly held indirectly through superannuation. This is largely inaccessible until retirement, and previous research has found little connection between changes in stock market wealth and household consumption in Australia.

Additionally, as I will expand upon below, the Australian dollar exchange rate tends to appreciate with increases in riskier asset prices, including US share prices. The appreciation of the exchange rate tightens domestic financial conditions, offsetting at least part of the effect of the decline in risk premia on overall financial conditions.

Sovereign bond yields also tend to be correlated across economies. However, international spillovers tend to be largest at the longer end of the yield curve. In Australia, it’s the short end of the yield curve that matters most for financial conditions, with most household and business lending undertaken at variable interest rates and most fixed-rate lending at terms of two years or less. Short-term interest rates in Australia are mostly determined by domestic factors with the cash rate target being the most important influence.

… and the exchange rate acts as a buffer against global shocks.

The exchange rate is one of the most important determinants of Australian financial conditions next to the cash rate. It is a key channel of transmission for monetary policy, and acts as a buffer against global shocks.

The two key long-run determinants of the level of the Australian dollar are terms of trade, which is heavily influenced by commodity prices, and the interest rate differential between Australia and other major advanced economies. Meanwhile, global risk sentiment, which can be proxied by the volatility index measure of option-implied volatility or global equity prices, is important for explaining short-run changes in the Australian dollar, which tends to depreciate when global risk appetite declines.

Now, while the relationships between the Australian dollar and its key determinants hold on average, they don’t necessarily hold at every point in time. At times, the exchange rate can influence financial conditions independently of interest rate differentials and the terms of trade. One way we monitor this is to compare the level of the real exchange rate to estimates of its long-run equilibrium value. Currently, the real trade-weighted exchange rate remains within estimates of its long-run equilibrium, as it has for most of the year (Graph 13).

Graph 13

This year, some have questioned if the relationship between the Australian dollar and global risk sentiment has changed in light of the discussion about the safe-haven qualities of the US dollar. If this were to occur, it could undermine the Australian dollar’s effectiveness as a buffer in ‘risk-off’ events, and against variation in risk premia more generally.

The first observation I would make is that the correlation between the Australian dollar and US equity prices remained close to its historical average through most of the year, and increased during the April volatility, with the Australian dollar initially depreciating sharply alongside falling US equity prices.

I would also observe that Australia is a small open commodity exporting economy that is exposed to both the level and composition of global growth. Nothing that has occurred in the United States changes that. Australia could indeed become relatively more attractive to global investors over time, given our strong institutions and comparably low levels of public debt. This would represent a structural decline in Australia’s country risk premium and so a lower neutral rate. However, even if that occurred, the Australian dollar would still be likely to depreciate during global risk-off events, as it did during the April market turmoil. Of course, if this did not occur for some reason, and the Australian dollar appreciated, the tightening effect of a sharp rise in global risk aversion on domestic financial conditions would be amplified via the exchange rate.

Conclusion

To conclude, 2025 has been an eventful year for international financial markets. It’s also been a year where policy uncertainty and market confidence have coexisted in extraordinary ways. So far, some of the more significant downside scenarios that had been contemplated earlier in the year, including a retrenchment of global trade or a significant market correction, have not materialised. Noting the recent market volatility, this is something we continue to monitor closely.

International financial market developments affect Australian financial conditions through a number of channels, including through global influences on our neutral rate, spillovers from internationally correlated risk and term premia, and the exchange rate.

In 2025, compressed equity risk premia and credit spreads meant that financial conditions in Australia were easier than otherwise. However, the structural features of Australia’s financial system, such as the dominant role of banks, short-term debt contracts, and compulsory superannuation, mean that equity prices and corporate credit spreads have less weight in overall financial conditions. The exchange rate also acts as a buffer against global shocks.

That said, the current global backdrop demands constant attention. As April’s events reminded us, we need to be prepared for potential episodes of volatility and potential market dislocation.

Funding boost to support ACT VET students

Source: Government of Australia Capital Territory

Improved Completions aims to help more Canberrans finish their VET training.

In brief:

  • The Australian and ACT Governments are working together to support vocational education and training (VET) students in Canberra.
  • They are funding a new initiative called Improved Completions.
  • It aims to help more Canberrans finish their VET training.

Joint investment from the Australian and ACT Governments will support vocational education and training (VET) students in the ACT.

A new initiative called Improved Completions aims to better support students so more can finish their training.

It is an important step in building a stronger, fairer and more flexible skills system.

The Improved Completions initiative

The Improved Completions initiative is part of Australia’s National Skills Agreement (NSA). This major reform aims to improve the nation’s skills and training system.

Improved Completions will concentrate on helping more VET students complete their courses.

It will test, measure and expand the best ways to support students so they can:

  • finish their studies
  • move into further training or get a job.

How it will work in the ACT

The ACT rollout includes four key activities:

The completions grants program

This program will support VET providers, employers and community organisations. It will help them offer extra support to students who are more likely to struggle or not complete their course.

Establishing a Careers Hub

The Careers Hub will give advice on VET courses and pathways. It will also help people find training or job opportunities.

Employers can use the hub to get help with upskilling workers or taking on new apprentices, including Australian School-based Apprentices.

Free text support service

This pilot service will send text messages to VET learners. The messages will support these students, building their confidence, mentoring and helping them understand their workplace rights.

Completions research

Research will be carried out to learn more about what helps students finish their training. The findings will be shared to improve support across Australia.

Support for all Canberrans

These groups are expected to benefit most from the initiative:

  • women
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
  • young people
  • mature age Australians
  • those experiencing long-term unemployment
  • people from culturally and linguistically diverse communities
  • people with disability.

The Improved Completions initiative will help more Canberrans finish their VET training and enter the workforce with confidence.

More information

Read more about pathways for school students on the ACT Education and Training website.

Find more information on Australian Apprenticeships and VET pathways on the Skills Canberra website.

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More rights for Victoria’s renters as Housing Statement reforms take effect

Source: Australian Capital Territory Policing

Victorian renters will have stronger rights and greater security, with changes to the state’s rental laws taking effect. 

The reforms, which started Tuesday 25 November 2025, are: 

  • a ban on rental bidding. It’s illegal for agents to accept higher amounts of rent than what is advertised 
  • all rental properties must meet the minimum standards before they are advertised or offered to let. If they don’t, it’s an offence 
  • smoke alarms must be correctly installed and tested every 12 months in all rental properties 
  • no-fault evictions are banned, so rental providers must have a valid reason to ask a renter to move out. Even at the end of a fixed-term rental agreement 
  • notice periods for rent increases and certain notices to vacate have lengthened from 60 days to 90 days. This applies to all rental properties, rooming houses, caravan parks and residential parks 
  • new rules for real estate agents to protect the information renters provide in their applications.   

From 1 December 2025, important new minimum standards apply. All blind and curtain cords in residential rental properties must be anchored, so that the cords are held tight and can’t form loose loops. And rooming house operators must install a fixed heater in each resident’s room.  

From 31 March 2026, giving rental providers time to adjust and comply: 

  • a new standard rental application form will make it quicker and easier for renters to apply for a property. Rental providers and agents won’t be able to ask applicants to give other information that’s not in the form
  • businesses will be banned from charging fees for rental applications and rent payments
  • the Director of Consumer Affairs Victoria and VCAT will have more matters to consider when considering whether a proposed rent increase is excessive. 

For more information, read the full list and detail of the changes

Doorstop interview, Parliament House, Canberra

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

Jim Chalmers:

Labor is the party of responsible economic management. We’ve delivered 2 surplus budgets, we’ve got the deficit down in the third year, we found $100 billion in savings, and we’ve got the Liberal debt down by almost $200 billion.

We won’t be taking lectures on responsible economic management from a Coalition which took to the election a policy for lower wages, higher taxes, bigger deficits and more debt to pay for nuclear reactors.

If the Coalition had its way and won the last election, Australians would be earning less, they would be paying more tax, there would be bigger deficits and there would be more debt. And to make things worse, as bad as it was that they took to the election a policy for higher taxes, bigger deficits and more debt, as bad as it has been that they have opposed our cost‑of‑living help for people doing it tough, they now have this economically insane approach to the energy transformation.

The Coalition’s approach to net zero would swing a wrecking ball through the budget and through the economy, and would push power prices up, not down. What the Coalition is proposing to appease the extreme far‑right in their own party room is a recipe for higher power prices, not lower prices. It’s a recipe for less investment in our economy and it’s a recipe for billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidy for ageing coal‑fired power stations.

Now, Ted O’Brien has an opportunity at the Press Club today to explain how much it will cost the budget for them to extend the least reliable, most expensive parts of the energy grid. We know from sensible analysts and experts and economists that upward pressure on energy prices is not coming from the new renewable, reliable, cleaner and cheaper energy. It’s coming from the fact that the ageing parts of the system are becoming less and less reliable. This harebrained idea from the Coalition in abandoning net zero would cost the budget billions of dollars. It would push power prices up and it would swing a wrecking ball through investor confidence, the budget and the economy more broadly. So, he has an opportunity to explain himself today.

As I understand it, he wants to talk about fiscal rules. The Coalition’s fiscal rules were not worth the paper they were written on. All they delivered was deficits. All they left us was a trillion dollars in debt. They weren’t able to contain their spending. The budget was chock full of waste and rorts. So Ted O’Brien and the Coalition are precisely the last people that we will take lectures from when it comes to responsible economic management. This Albanese Labor government is defined by responsible economic management. We’ve got the budget in much better nick than we inherited from our opponents at the same time as we’re cutting income taxes 3 times and providing the cost‑of‑living relief that people need and deserve when they’re under pressure.

Happy to take a few questions.

Journalist:

Treasurer, are you expecting inflation to go up or down today?

Chalmers:

We’ll see what the numbers say later today, but certainly economists expect the headline number to tick up a little bit as a consequence of the end of some of those state energy rebates. For that reason, a lot of economists I think will focus more on the underlying figure today.

But whatever the number says today, it will be extremely clear that inflation is very substantially lower than what we inherited from the Coalition. When the Coalition left office, inflation was north of 6 per cent and skyrocketing. We’ve been able to get it down substantially since then. And because of our responsible economic management and because of the progress that Australians have made together on inflation, that’s given the Reserve Bank the confidence to cut interest rates 3 times already, and that’s providing some welcome relief to millions of Australians with a mortgage.

Journalist:

Treasurer, asking departments and agencies to find 5 per cent of what they’re doing to no longer do, you may not want to call it a cut, but that is an unprecedented amount. Efficiency dividends are normally one per cent, that’s a massive cut. Did you know before the election that your budget was in this bad position? Should you have been clearer about this in advance?

Chalmers:

Oh look, there are a series of things in your question which I wouldn’t agree with. For example, we’re not talking about imposing a 5 per cent efficiency dividend on departments. We’re not asking departments to cut their staff or their budgets by 5 per cent.

What we’re doing in the lead‑up to this budget is what we’ve done in the lead‑up to every budget, which is asking departments and agencies and ministers to identify lower priority spending that we could consider redirecting to higher priority areas. And in our first 4 budgets we found $100 billion in savings, and that has helped us make room to strengthen Medicare and build Urgent Care Clinics, invest in bulk billing, and cut income taxes 3 times.

So, it’s not unusual or unprecedented or especially controversial for treasurers and finance ministers to ask others, other ministers and other departments, to identify areas of lower priority spending. We’re not asking every department to cut their staff or to cut their budgets by 5 per cent.

Journalist:

But you concede jobs will be lost?

Chalmers:

We’re doing what responsible economic managers do, which is to identify lower priority areas to redirect that, if we want to and need to, to higher priority areas. And so the approach that we’re taking to our fifth budget is the same as the approach we’ve taken to the first 4, and because of that responsible economic management we’ve delivered 2 surpluses and a smaller deficit in the third year. We’ve improved the budget by $200 billion, we’ve got the Liberal debt down by almost $200 billion. That’s saving Australians in debt interest, at the same time as we’re building Urgent Care Clinics and strengthening Medicare and cutting income taxes.

Now our approach to staffing levels in the public service is to make sure that the public service has the people that they need to provide the services that Australians deserve. For example, in Veterans’, we’ve provided more people and more resources to get through that shameful backlog that we inherited from our opponents and make sure that more claims are processed more quickly.

That’s been our approach to people in the Australian Public Service. Our approach to the budget is a responsible one. The contrast with our opponents couldn’t be clearer.

Journalist:

[inaudible]

Chalmers:

We’ll just go here and come back, Tom.

Journalist:

You’ve spoken about redirecting funds from low priority areas to high priority. What, to you, is a low priority area?

Chalmers:

Well, we’ve made it clear in the past with $100 billion in savings that there are areas of the budget that we can trim in order to make room to strengthen Medicare and cut income taxes 3 times. Again, this is not an especially unusual or controversial process. I see it as an important part of ensuring that we’re getting maximum value for money for taxpayer dollars.

There are pressures on the budget. We have made good progress in cleaning up the mess that we inherited but there’s more work to do. That work is ongoing. And from time to time, you will ask us, you know, ‘Will there be savings in the Budget in May?’ Ideally there are savings in every budget because it helps us make room for some of those higher priority areas.

So, we ask the departments in the months leading up to budgets each time to identify areas where we can make savings if that money could be better spent elsewhere, and that’s what we’re doing on this occasion too.

Journalist:

Just on the coal sweating, sorry, Treasurer, the costing you’ve got out today, are you able to indicate the figure that the government currently spends to keep coal‑fired power stations open for longer at federal and state levels, and if you were to turn off coal‑fired power today what sort of impact do you think that would have on power prices?

Chalmers:

Well, nobody’s proposing to do that. Nobody’s proposing to turn coal off today. No responsible person is suggesting that. When it comes to the cost of the Coalition’s economic insanity on net zero, what we’re saying today is that if they want to continue to sweat these assets across the board for a much longer period than what is sensible, that will cost the budget billions of dollars. It will push power prices up, not down. And that’s because as you know, Tom, as I assume you know, the pressure on electricity prices is coming from the ageing part of the fleet, not the new part of the fleet. To extend the fleet in ways that they seem to be proposing would cost the budget billions of dollars.

Now, the Shadow Treasurer has an opportunity to answer these important questions later on at the National Press Club, and if he’s asked, he needs to come clean. How much will it cost to extend these ageing coal‑fired power stations? And what would that mean for prices?

The government’s energy policy is clear. Our approach to net zero is clear. We’re playing catch up because so much energy left the system in the life of the former government. We’re introducing new, cleaner and cheaper, more renewable, more reliable energy into the system, because that’s what gives us the best chance over time of putting downward pressure on prices.

Journalist:

Treasurer, just on Ted O’Brien’s speech, if you take the politics out of this and focus purely on policy, would you agree that a set of formal rules governing how much the government can spend would be a useful addition to when you’re putting the Budget together?

Chalmers:

We have fiscal rules in the Budget and because of the way that we’ve managed the budget responsibly, we’ve delivered the first 2 surpluses in a couple of decades and we got the deficit for the year just finished down substantially. Debt, Liberal debt, is down almost $200 billion, and that’s because we have fiscal rules in the Budget and it’s because we’re managing the budget in the most responsible way that we can.

Unlike our predecessors, for example, over the life of this government we’ve banked more of the upward revisions to revenue than we spent. Our predecessors used to spend most of them. Right across the board we’re taking a more responsible approach to the budget. Now, our predecessors had fiscal rules, they weren’t worth the paper they were written on. They promised a surplus every year and delivered only deficits. They doubled the debt even before the COVID pandemic. When we came to office, spending as a share of the economy was close to a third. We got it down closer to a quarter and there’s more work to do on that front as well.

So, Ted O’Brien can talk all he likes about fiscal rules. They failed on every front when they were in office and they’ve just taken to the election a policy for higher income taxes, bigger deficits and more debt to pay for nuclear reactors. So once again, precisely the last people that anyone should take advice from on responsible economic management is the Coalition. One more question and then we’re done. Phil?

Journalist:

Treasurer, when you talk about, you’re doing power cheaper than they’ll do it, does that include the cost of the transmission infrastructure? Do you still think it’ll be cheaper with that combined with it?

Chalmers:

Yeah, the point that we’re making is the same point that sensible, rational economists and analysts and experts have made, which is the cheapest form of new energy is renewable energy. Any government of any political persuasion has to make decisions about how we replace the coal‑fired power which is exiting the system. That’s not an ideological point of view or a partisan point of view, it’s a fact of life in our economy that these ageing coal‑fired power plants are slated to come out of the system. So, governments have to decide what they replace that with and any rational, sensible person knows that the cheapest, most efficient way to replace that energy is cleaner and cheaper, more renewable, more reliable energy, and that’s our approach. Now we all know –

Journalist:

And that’s inclusive of the transmission cost?

Chalmers:

Yes, and we all know what’s happening here. The Coalition has completely abandoned responsible economic management, and they do that to appease the far‑right in their own party room, and they do that to appease Pauline Hanson and others. They have vacated the field on the economy. They can talk all they like about fiscal rules and the all the rest of it, the fact is that if the Coalition won the election and had their way, young people, every worker would be paying higher income taxes, there’d be bigger deficits and more debt. They said so in their own costings document that they released in the couple of days before election day.

We’re managing the budget responsibly. We’re managing this net zero transformation in the way that makes the most economic sense. We’re cutting taxes 3 times to make the tax system fairer for workers, for young people in particular, and to return more bracket creep.

If they won the election, taxes would be higher, there’d be less bracket creep being returned, bigger deficits and more debt to pay for nuclear reactors, and that’s why the last people that anyone should take advice from on responsible economic management is Ted O’Brien and the Coalition.

Thanks very much, everyone.

Charges – Theft – Katherine

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force has charged two men in relation to large scale fuel theft in Katherine.

Police will alleged that between October 2024 and November 2025, two men, aged 37 and 51, stole approximately $141,000 worth of fuel using a fob allegedly taken from a business on Zimin Drive, and used at a business in Katherine.

Officers from the Northern Investigations Section arrested both men after executing search warrants on multiple properties in the Katherine region.

Both men have been charged with Theft and bailed to appear in Katherine Local Court on 6 January 2026.