Australia’s RBA Commodity Index (SDR), year on year, rose to 2.7% in February. The previous reading was 2.6%.
This is an increase of 0.1 percentage points from the prior figure. The data refers to year-on-year change in February.
Commodity Index Signals Export Strength
We see this slight uptick in the commodity price index as a confirmation of underlying strength in Australia’s export sector. This continued momentum, even if small, provides a bullish signal for assets linked to the nation’s terms of trade. For derivative traders, this reinforces a positive outlook on the Australian dollar.
This trend is supported by external factors, as demand from China appears to be stabilizing. Recent data from early 2026 shows China’s manufacturing PMI unexpectedly holding in expansionary territory, while iron ore prices have firmed up above $125 a tonne. This backdrop suggests the demand for Australia’s key exports is solid.
Given this, we should consider positioning for further strength in the Australian dollar against the US dollar. Buying near-term AUD/USD call options could be a prudent strategy to capture potential upside. The pair has been building a base, and this data could provide the catalyst to test higher resistance levels in the coming weeks.
This also has positive implications for the Australian equity market, particularly the materials sector. We anticipate this will support the ASX 200, so going long on index futures is a viable play. Alternatively, traders could look at buying call options on major miners who benefit directly from higher commodity receipts.
Looking back, this steady climb in the commodity index contrasts with the volatility we saw through much of 2025. That period of uncertainty now seems to be resolving into a clear, albeit gentle, uptrend. This makes the current signal more reliable than those we were seeing six to nine months ago.
Implications For Rates And Rba Policy
The persistence of higher commodity prices will also keep the Reserve Bank of Australia on alert for inflation. This may temper market expectations for any near-term interest rate cuts. We should therefore be cautious about positioning for lower rates and might even consider strategies that benefit from the RBA holding rates firm for longer.