Australian Dollar Forecast: Bullish
- The Australian Dollar has been whipped around by US Dollar moves
- The RBA have their work cut out for them in the coming days as pressures build
- Interest rate differential might be the driving force. Higher AUD/USD?
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The Australian Dollar staged an outstanding rally going into the weekend after making a six-month low mid-week. Once again, US Dollar machinations dominated proceedings, but domestic factors might provide some volatility with the RBA meeting this Tuesday.
Markets in general breathed a sigh of relief with the US debt ceiling issue having been resolved on Friday. Risk assets across the spectrum gained and the growth-linked Aussie Dollar joined the party.
While building approvals came in soft on Tuesday, falling 8.1% against a lift of 2% anticipated and 1.0% prior, there are growing alarm bells for inflationary pressures within the financial system.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publishes a monthly CPI figure that covers 62-73% of the weighted quarterly basket. The RBA’s mandated target of 2 – 3% over the cycle is linked to the quarterly figure.
The reliability of the monthly CPI measure has been questionable since it was introduced last year but nonetheless, the RBA cited it when they hit the pause button on the hiking cycle earlier this year. They may acknowledge it this Tuesday when they meet again to decide on rates.
Year-on-year CPI reaccelerated to 6.8% to the end of April according to the monthly gauge, well above forecasts of 6.4% and 6.3% prior.
Compounding the dilemma for the RBA is the Fair Work Commission’s annual wage review decision on Friday. It delivered an increase to the minimum wage in all modern awards by 5.75%. This was above general perceptions of a 5% rise. It will take effect from the 1st of July 2023.
While there is a sense of fairness to the outcome, it effectively gives consumers more capacity to pay for goods and services, further swelling the price-wages spiral.
Adding to the case for a hawkish RBA decision, Australian private sector credit for April showed growth of 0.6% month-on-month against the 0.3% expected.
RBA Governor Philip Lowe appeared before the Senate Economics Legislation Committee last week and noted the difficulty of getting CPI down while wages are rising at the pace that they have been.
The interest rate market is pricing a low probability of a hike on Tuesday. It seems that there might be a strong case for more tightening.
Elsewhere on the rates front, the benchmark 2-year bond spread went to 105 basis points (bp) in favour of the ‘big dollar’ at the start of last week, but it has since contracted to around 70 bp at the same time that AUD/USD saw an uptick.
Interest rate differential may continue to hold sway over AUD/USD and a surprise tilt from the RBA might ignite some action in the currency.
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AUD/USD broke out of the 0.6565 – 0.6818 range that it had been in for 3 months on its way to making a 6-month at 0.6458 last week.
On Thursday a Bullish Engulfing Candlestick formation was created and it may indicate a bullish reversal may evolve.
Support could be at the breakpoint of 06574 and 0.6565 or the recent low of 0.6458.
Further down, support may lie at the prior low of 0.6387 and the nearby Fibonacci level of 0.6381. The latter is the 78.6% Fibonacci Retracement of the move from the low of 0.6170 to the peak of 0.7158.
On the topside, resistance could be at the breakpoints and previous peaks of 0.6675 and 0.6710. Further up, the 0.6780 – 0.6820 area might offer a more significant resistance zone with several prior highs and breakpoints.
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— Written by Daniel McCarthy, Strategist for DailyFX.com
Please contact Daniel via @DanMcCarthyFX on Twitter