Shareholder Value Vantage Point — Quarter 1 2026 compared to Quarter 4 2025

Q1 2026 compared to Q4 2025

An inflation shock reprices the rate path and compresses shareholder value across ten of eleven sectors

The consensus has turned hawkish. In three months, the expected RBA cash rate for end-2026 has jumped 67 basis points to 4.11% as inflation proves stickier than anticipated. The 10-year government bond yield has risen 34 basis points to 4.58% for end-2026. For shareholders in rate-sensitive sectors, including real estate, consumer discretionary, utilities and technology, this is a direct hit to the cost of capital that underpins every investment decision and corporate value assessment. Only financials benefit, and even they face an intense structural reckoning with AI disruption.

Domain 1: The cost of capital — the foundation of value

This quarter’s consensus revisions deliver the most significant repricing of the Australian rate path in over a year. The shift is not subtle. It is a wholesale reassessment of where rates are heading, driven by inflation that refuses to cooperate with the easing narrative that prevailed three months ago. The RBA hiked the cash rate from 3.60% to 3.85% at its February meeting, reversing 75 basis points of cuts made during 2025, citing inflation that remains above the 2.0-3.0% target band.

Consensus forecast for calendar year 2026
RBA cash rate (eop)3.44%4.11%+67 bps
10-year bond yield (eop)4.24%4.58%+34 bps
90-day bank bill (eop)3.43%4.09%+66 bps
Yield curve spread (cash to 10yr)80 bps47 bps-33 bps
Both columns show each quarter’s consensus expectation for the CY2026 outcome. The delta reflects how expectations shifted between the Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 consensus.

The cash rate has moved from an expected easing cycle (3.44% by end-2026) to something closer to a hold or even a tightening bias (4.11%). That 67 basis point jump feeds directly into the cost of floating-rate debt and the short end of the yield curve. The 10-year bond yield has moved less aggressively but from a higher base, compressing the yield curve spread from 80 to 47 basis points. This flattening tells a specific story: the market expects the RBA to fight inflation in the near term, but does not believe rates will stay elevated permanently.

Panelist dispersion
The spread on the 10-year bond yield for CY2026 is 120 basis points (3.80% to 5.00%), the widest of any financial market KPI this quarter. This reflects genuine disagreement about whether the inflation resurgence is transitory or structural. For anyone building a discounted cash flow model, that uncertainty alone warrants sensitivity analysis across at least a 100 basis point range on the risk-free rate assumption.
RBA cash rate consensus: 90-day momentum consistently rising
Source: FocusEconomics panelist history. Each data point is the monthly consensus snapshot as published by FocusEconomics, not a Market Line interpolation.

The momentum data reinforces the severity of the shift. The cash rate consensus has been rising consistently for 90 days — from 3.44% to 3.64% to 4.07% to 4.11%. This was not a single-event repricing but a steady, quarter-long deterioration in the outlook. Both the cash rate and the 90-day bank bill show the same pattern, confirming that the hawkish turn is broad-based across forecasters, not driven by a handful of outliers.

Domain 2: The operating environment and cash flows — the engine of value

The domestic economy is running hotter than expected. That sounds like good news. It is not. The heat is generating the inflation that is pushing rates higher and compressing shareholder value from the other direction.

The five-year forecast trajectories below tell a more nuanced story than any single-year snapshot. Where the shift is front-loaded and fading, the impact is cyclical. Where it persists or builds across the forecast horizon, it is structural.

Fixed investment (ann. var. %)
Near-term surge, long-term fade — a cyclical capex burst, not structural deepening
Q4 2025 (previous)Q1 2026 (current)
The investment surge is front-loaded: revised sharply higher for 2026 (+0.5 ppts to 3.4%) but fading from 2027 onward. The Q4 2025 GDP data confirms the spike was driven by data centre construction, renewable energy and water infrastructure. For shareholders, near-term earnings from capex-linked sectors will be stronger than expected, but this should not be extrapolated into long-term cash flow assumptions. Companies relying on the investment cycle to sustain revenue growth beyond 2027 face a declining tailwind.
Inflation — CPI (ann. var. %, aop)
Front-loaded spike with convergence by 2028 — but the near-term margin damage is real
Q4 2025Q1 2026
CPI for 2026 has jumped 40 basis points to 3.3%, driven primarily by the mid-2025 electricity price hike working through the base. The consensus expects convergence to 2.4% by 2028 as the spike falls out of comparison and rate hikes tame domestic demand. For shareholders, businesses without genuine pricing power will see input costs rise faster than revenues for the next 12 to 18 months. If the consensus is wrong and inflation proves structural rather than transitory, the rate repricing in Domain 1 is just the beginning.
Real GDP growth (ann. var. %)
Essentially unchanged across the entire horizon — growth is steady, not accelerating
Q4 2025Q1 2026
GDP growth is unchanged at 2.2% for 2026. The Q4 2025 print came in at 0.8% quarter on quarter, above expectations, but the strength was entirely driven by inventory accumulation while underlying components softened. For shareholders, top-line revenue growth for domestically focused businesses will remain in the low single digits. Achieving growth above this requires market share gains or pricing power, not macroeconomic tailwinds.
Private consumption (ann. var. %)
Marginal softening near-term as inflation erodes household purchasing power
Q4 2025Q1 2026
Consumption has softened marginally at the front end (2026: 2.2% to 2.1%) while holding steady from 2027 onward. With CPI running above 3%, real wage growth is compressed even where nominal wages are stable. For consumer-facing businesses, the implication is a tighter discretionary spending environment in 2026 that eases gradually. Staples will outperform discretionary. Businesses with strong repeat purchase dynamics are better positioned than those reliant on new customer acquisition.
Unemployment (% of active population, aop)
Flat at 4.4% across the entire horizon — the labour market is not cracking
Q4 2025Q1 2026
Unemployment is flat at 4.4% across the entire forecast horizon. January 2026 data showed unemployment steady at 4.1% with employment at a record 14.70 million. For shareholders, stable employment supports consumer spending and credit quality, but it also means wage cost pressures are unlikely to ease. Margin improvement will come from productivity gains and operational efficiency, not from a weakening labour market.
AUD/USD exchange rate (eop)
Modest near-term AUD strength, converging at the long end
Q4 2025Q1 2026
The AUD has strengthened modestly ($0.68 to $0.70 for end-2026), boosted by the February rate hike. For export-exposed companies, particularly mining and agriculture where revenue is USD-denominated and costs are AUD-denominated, this creates a direct headwind to AUD-denominated earnings. For domestically focused businesses the move is immaterial. The effect fades by 2028 as forecasts converge.
Where uncertainty is highest
Fixed investment has a panelist spread of 4.7 percentage points for CY2026 (ranging from 1.1% to 5.8%), the widest of any real economy KPI. Inflation dispersion is 1.9 percentage points (2.1% to 4.0%). The market genuinely does not know whether the current investment surge is cyclical or structural, or whether inflation is transitory or embedded. Both questions have direct consequences for cash flow forecasts and discount rates.
Domain 3: Terminal value — the long-term horizon

Terminal value typically accounts for 60 to 80 per cent of an enterprise value assessment. It is driven by four variables: the long-term growth rate, the long-term inflation rate (which together inform the terminal growth rate assumption), the risk-free rate, and the cost of capital. All four have moved this quarter.

Terminal value drivers — five-year consensus trajectory
Consensus forecast — long-dated indicators
Neutral rate proxy (2029 RBA cash rate)3.10%3.48%+38 bps
Risk-free rate proxy (2027 10yr bond)4.16%4.48%+32 bps
Long-term CPI (2028-2030 average)2.40%2.40%unchanged
Long-term real GDP (2028-2030 average)2.37%2.37%unchanged
Both columns show each quarter’s consensus expectation for the stated year or period. The delta reflects how expectations shifted between Q4 2025 and Q1 2026.

The terminal value story this quarter is asymmetric. The numerator inputs, long-term growth and inflation, have not moved. Real GDP growth settles at 2.3 to 2.4% and CPI at 2.4% across the outer years, identical to last quarter. But the denominator inputs, the risk-free rate and the cost of capital, have moved materially higher.

The arithmetic is straightforward. If the terminal growth rate assumption is unchanged but the WACC increases by 30 to 40 basis points, the terminal multiple (1/(WACC-g)) compresses. On a business with a 10% WACC and a 2.5% terminal growth rate, a 35 basis point increase in WACC reduces the terminal multiple from 13.3x to 12.7x, a 4.5% reduction in terminal value. On a business where terminal value represents 70% of enterprise value, that equates to roughly a 3% reduction in total value from this single quarter’s rate repricing alone.

The RBA cash rate trajectory paints a telling picture. In Q4 2025 the consensus expected a glide path down to 3.02% by 2030. Three months later, the 2030 endpoint has barely moved (3.10%), but the path to get there has been pushed sharply higher through the middle years: 2027 is up 41 basis points, 2028 up 46 basis points. The market expects rates to come down eventually, but the “eventually” has been pushed out by one to two years. That delay is real money for any business carrying floating-rate debt or evaluating capital projects with a three to five year payback.

Domain 4 — New this quarter: AI sector disruption indicator

Beginning this quarter, we publish a proprietary indicator that maps each edition’s macroeconomic consensus shifts against the structural AI disruption exposure of each ASX GICS sector. The methodology is transparent and published in full.

Each sector is scored on two axes. The horizontal axis measures this quarter’s macro impact — how much do the consensus revisions help or hurt the sector? The vertical axis measures structural AI disruption exposure, assessed across five dimensions organised into three independent groups: supply-side exposure (labour substitutability, AI-enabled productivity upside), demand-side exposure (customer interface disruption, competitive barrier erosion), and data and decision intensity as a standalone dimension.

On the quadrant map, bubble size encodes the balance between demand-side and supply-side AI exposure. Larger bubbles indicate sectors where AI primarily threatens the revenue model. Smaller bubbles indicate sectors where AI primarily affects the cost structure — which, if managed well, is an opportunity to improve margins rather than a threat to revenue.

AI sector disruption indicator — Q1 2026
Double jeopardy Adapt or accelerate Weather the storm Steady value
Bubble size reflects the demand-to-supply ratio of AI exposure. Larger bubbles = revenue model at greater risk. Smaller bubbles = cost structure is the primary exposure.

This quarter, five sectors sit in “Double jeopardy”, facing macro headwinds and high AI disruption exposure simultaneously. Real estate and consumer discretionary are the most exposed on the macro axis (both heavily rate-sensitive in a quarter defined by hawkish repricing), while information technology carries the highest AI disruption score of any sector at 4.2 out of 5. Consumer discretionary and communication services are the only two sectors with a demand-to-supply ratio above 1.0, meaning their revenue models are more threatened by AI than their cost structures. The larger bubbles on the chart reflect this.

Financials stand alone in “Adapt or accelerate” — the only sector with a positive macro score this quarter because banks benefit from higher rates through wider net interest margins. But their AI disruption score is 4.0, among the highest, and their exposure is nearly balanced between supply and demand. The message for financial sector boards is to use the rate tailwind to invest in AI adaptation, because the structural pressure is not easing.

The empty “Steady value” quadrant, with no sectors enjoying both macro tailwinds and low AI disruption, reflects the breadth of the headwinds from the inflation shock. When rates move this aggressively, almost nobody escapes unscathed.

Full methodology available

The AI Sector Disruption Indicator methodology — including all sensitivity weights, AI dimension scores and published rationale for each sector — is available on request. We update the AI scores annually and the macro scores each quarter using the FocusEconomics consensus data. Contact us at [email protected] for the full methodology document.

This document is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. The economic forecasts and analyses presented are based on consensus data from FocusEconomics. These projections are subject to change and uncertainty. The information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but Market Line makes no representations or warranties as to its accuracy, completeness, or suitability for any particular purpose. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk. The economic projections and opinions expressed in this newsletter are general in nature and do not take into account the specific circumstances, financial situation, or particular needs of any individual or entity. They should not be construed as recommendations to make any investment decisions or to take any specific actions. Market Line and its employees shall not be liable for any loss or damage, direct or indirect, arising from the use of or reliance upon any information contained in this newsletter.

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