In December, Australia reported an unemployment rate of 4.1%, which is below the expected 4.4%. This shows a decrease in unemployment figures compared to prior projections.
This decline in unemployment suggests an improvement in the Australian labour market. The figures indicate a more robust job market than many had anticipated for the month.
Economic Resilience
The December 2025 unemployment rate came in at 4.1%, which was much stronger than the 4.4% the market was expecting. This suggests the Australian economy is more resilient than we previously thought. This surprising strength makes it less likely that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will cut interest rates in the near future.
We are seeing traders rapidly unwind bets on an early 2026 rate cut. The implied probability of a rate cut by the May 2026 meeting has now dropped from over 60% to below 25% following this data release. This means derivatives pricing in lower rates will need to be adjusted, presenting an opportunity to trade against overly dovish expectations.
This outlook is supportive for the Australian dollar, as higher-for-longer interest rates attract foreign investment. We saw the AUD/USD cross immediately rally past the 0.6780 level, a key technical resistance point it struggled to break throughout late 2025. Traders should consider positions that benefit from further AUD strength, particularly against currencies where the central bank is expected to ease policy.
Market Implications
For the ASX 200, the implications are mixed, which creates openings for options traders. While a strong economy supports corporate earnings, the prospect of sustained high interest rates can pressure company valuations. We could see underperformance in rate-sensitive sectors like real estate and technology, which saw significant gains in the second half of 2025.
This jobs report is especially significant when we remember the last quarterly inflation report for Q4 2025 showed core inflation at a stubborn 3.5%. This was still meaningfully above the RBA’s 2-3% target band. A tight labor market combined with sticky inflation gives the central bank a clear reason to maintain its current restrictive policy stance for longer than anticipated.