19 Jan 20233 min read

Notching in Credit Ratings: What Australian Borrowers Need to Know (2026)

Want to make smarter borrowing or investment decisions in 2026? Keep following Cockatoo for expert insights into the trends shaping Australian finance.

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Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

When Australians think about borrowing, investing, or dealing with banks, the world of credit ratings is rarely front of mind. Yet, in 2026, a technical concept called notching is quietly influencing the rates you pay, the risk banks take, and even the yields on your super fund’s fixed income investments. If you want to get ahead financially, understanding notching could give you an unexpected edge.

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What is Notching? The Mechanics Behind Credit Ratings

Notching is a nuanced tool used by credit rating agencies (like S&P Global, Moody’s, and Fitch) to adjust the credit rating of specific financial instruments—such as bonds, loans, or hybrid securities—relative to the overall credit rating of the issuing entity.

  • Base rating: A bank, company, or government is given a headline credit rating (e.g., AA, BBB).

  • Instrument-level risk: Not all debts are equal. Some have more security, collateral, or seniority in a wind-up. Others are riskier, lower-ranked, or have complex terms.

  • Notching adjustment: Agencies apply “notches” up or down (often in increments of one-third of a rating category) to reflect these differences.

For example, if a bank has an issuer rating of A, a senior unsecured bond might be rated A-, while a subordinated hybrid note could be notched down to BBB or lower. This process ensures that investors and regulators can accurately compare the true risk of individual products.

Why Notching Matters in Australia: Real-World Impacts in 2026

Notching isn’t just theoretical—it has major practical consequences for Australian borrowers, banks, and investors in 2026.

1. Loan and Bond Pricing

Banks use notched ratings to set interest rates on everything from business loans to mortgage-backed securities. A lower notched rating means higher funding costs for the bank, which often gets passed on to borrowers. For instance, a corporate borrower with a notched-down bond may face a premium of 0.20%–0.50% compared to a higher-rated peer.

2. Bank Capital Rules

APRA’s 2023–2026 bank capital reforms have tightened the relationship between risk and capital. Notched ratings play a direct role in determining how much capital banks must hold against different exposures, particularly for hybrid securities and structured products. As a result, banks are more sensitive to how their instruments are notched—and may alter product design or pricing to mitigate adverse impacts.

3. Superannuation and Investment Portfolios

Australian super funds and asset managers rely on notched ratings to construct compliant, diversified portfolios. Under ASIC’s 2024 guidance, funds must demonstrate that their “investment grade” allocations reflect the true, notched risk of underlying assets—not just the headline issuer rating. This has led to some funds rebalancing portfolios away from lower-notched debt, impacting yield and risk profiles for everyday Australians.

4. Case Study: 2026 Green Bonds

The surge in green and sustainability-linked bonds in Australia has spotlighted notching. Many green bonds are structurally subordinated or have unique covenants, leading to heavier notching compared to standard senior debt. In 2026, a major Australian bank’s green bond was notched two levels below its senior debt due to “structural subordination”—a warning for investors chasing yield in the ESG space.

What Should Borrowers and Investors Do?

  • Don’t assume all ‘A-rated’ products are equal: Always check for instrument-level ratings and understand why a product may be notched up or down.

    • Ask your bank or adviser: How does notching affect the price or risk of this loan, bond, or investment?

    • Stay updated: Notching criteria and regulatory guidance continue to evolve. Watch for 2026 updates from major agencies and regulators.

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Conclusion

Notching may sound like a technical footnote, but in the world of Australian finance, it’s a powerful force shaping the cost of borrowing, the safety of investments, and the stability of banks. In 2026, as regulation tightens and markets innovate, understanding notching could help you avoid hidden risks and seize smarter opportunities—whether you’re a borrower, investor, or just financially curious.

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Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team

In-house editorial team

Publishes and updates Cockatoo’s public explainers on finance, insurance, property, home services, and provider hiring for Australians.

Borrowing and lending in AustraliaInsurance and risk coverProperty decisions and homeowner planning
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Reviewed by

Louis Blythe

Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Reviews Cockatoo’s public explainers for accuracy, topical alignment, and consistency before they are surfaced as public educational content.

Editorial review and fact checkingAustralian finance and borrowing topicsInsurance and cover explainers
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