CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
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Australian Dollar Outlook: AUD/USD Surges as Risk Appetite Returns Ahead of AU CPI

By :   Matt Simpson , Market Analyst

The Australian dollar has been the standout performer in FX this past week, rallying sharply against all major peers. Gains versus the Japanese yen and US dollar have been particularly strong, with neither AUD/USD nor AUD/JPY showing any meaningful signs of a bearish reversal so far. Improving risk sentiment and renewed focus on domestic inflation risks have combined to put the Aussie firmly back on traders’ radar.

View related analysis:

 

Why AUD/USD Is Rallying as Risk Appetite Improves and RBA Hike Bets Return

Improving risk sentiment — helped by easing geopolitical and tariff concerns tied to recent US–Greenland headlines — has allowed traders to refocus on domestic fundamentals and the potential for further policy tightening by the Reserve Bank of Australia. A rally in base metals is reinforcing expectations of a pickup in global growth, adding another tailwind for the Australian dollar. Crucially, the Aussie’s broad-based strength shows this is not simply a US dollar story, suggesting underlying demand for AUD is building earlier than expected.

Source: TradingView

 

No Change Expected from the Fed

Markets have been pricing in no change from the Federal Reserve for some time, and there is little reason to expect otherwise. Despite President Trump’s persistent efforts to pressure Fed Chair Jerome Powell, US not cooling quickly enough to justify rate cuts.

As a result, the Fed is unlikely to deviate materially from its current guidance at this meeting. Updated economic projections were released in December, and incoming data since then has only reinforced expectations for policy to remain on hold.
 

 

Q4 CPI Takes Centre Stage for RBA Policy

Source: ABS, LSEG

 

Domestically, Australia’s economic calendar needs little over-analysis, with Wednesday’s Q4 CPI report clearly the focal point. Governor Michele Bullock has made it clear that this inflation print is the key swing factor for the February policy meeting. The Bank has deliberately adopted a wait-and-see stance, and Q4 CPI represents the final major data input before a decision is made on whether policy needs to tighten again.

Following this week’s strong employment figures for December, any heat in CPI data — reflected through a firmer trimmed mean or persistently sticky services inflation — would materially lift expectations that the RBA could still deliver a rate hike as soon as February.

 

AUD/USD Correlations

Traditional correlations with the Australian dollar have re-emerged amid macro-driven volatility, with gold, the New Zealand dollar (NZD) and the Chinese yuan (CNH) showing a strong positive relationship, alongside a clear inverse correlation with the US dollar (USD) index.

Source: LSEG

 

 

 

AUD/USD Futures Positioning – COT Report

The slight decline in net-long exposure fails to capture the explosive move higher in the Australian dollar, as the report was compiled at Tuesday’s close — missing the Aussie’s 2.4% rally into Friday. With AUD/USD extending gains again on Monday, there’s a strong chance futures traders are already net-long the pair. And if asset managers aren’t there yet, they’re likely very close to flipping to a bullish net-long stance.

Source: CFTC, CME, LSEG

 

AUD/USD Technical Analysis

There is little need to overcomplicate the technical picture while the Australian dollar remains in the midst of a strong, fundamentally driven move. Unless global sentiment reverses sharply and expectations for an RBA hike fade, pullbacks are likely to be favoured by AUD/USD bulls. I also suspect futures traders will hold on to net-long exposure for some time once achieved — if they haven’t already reached that point.

Implied volatility is lifting from depressed levels, while risk reversals are turning higher, signalling that demand for calls is rising and beginning to outpace demand for puts. That said, both the 10-delta and 25-delta risk reversals dipped slightly after AUD/USD tagged the 2024 high on Monday, warning of potential near-term exhaustion.

While AUD/USD may look stretched in the short term, meaningful pullbacks appear unlikely in the current environment. Bulls are now eyeing a move toward 0.70, a break above which would bring the 2023 high firmly into focus as the year progresses.

Source: LSEG

 

 

View the full economic calendar

 

-- Written by Matt Simpson

Follow Matt on Twitter @cLeverEdge

 

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