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Aussie Dollar Faces Headwinds Despite Growing RBA Tightening Signals
The Australian Dollar (AUD) continues its downward trajectory against the US Dollar (USD), marking the sixth consecutive day of declines. While recent economic data points to potential rate hikes from the Reserve Bank of Australia as early as February, the currency remains under pressure in a market increasingly uncertain about the diverging monetary policy paths between central banks.
Consumer Inflation Expectations Support RBA Hawkish Narrative
Australia’s consumer inflation sentiment climbed to 4.7% in December, rising from November’s three-month low of 4.5%, bolstering the case for the RBA to consider early tightening measures. This uptick reflects persistent price pressures in an economy constrained by limited spare capacity.
Major Australian financial institutions, including Commonwealth Bank of Australia and National Australia Bank, have shifted their forecasts following the RBA’s hawkish stance at its latest policy meeting. They now project rate increases could commence sooner than previously anticipated. Market pricing suggests an approximate 28% probability of a February hike, with March seeing nearly 41% odds, and August almost entirely priced in for monetary tightening.
US Dollar Maintains Strength Amid Fading Rate Cut Expectations
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the greenback’s performance against six major currencies, remains resilient near 98.40. The USD’s resilience stems from diminishing prospects for additional Federal Reserve rate cuts throughout the coming year.
Recent employment data painted a mixed picture. The November jobs report revealed payroll expansion of 64K—marginally above forecasts—while October figures were revised substantially lower. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.6%, the highest reading since 2021, signaling a gradual cooling in labor market conditions. Meanwhile, retail sales stagnated monthly, suggesting consumer spending momentum is waning.
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic emphasized in his Tuesday commentary that the employment landscape presents conflicting signals. He reiterated a preference for maintaining rates at their current level, citing multiple surveys indicating elevated input costs. Bostic cautioned that price pressures extend beyond tariff-related factors, stating the Fed should refrain from premature optimism, with his GDP projection for 2026 hovering around 2.5%.
Federal policymakers remain divided on the necessity for additional monetary stimulus next year. The consensus among Fed officials suggests just one rate reduction in 2026, though some officials see no cuts warranted. In contrast, futures traders anticipate approximately two reductions, creating a disparity in expectations. CME FedWatch data indicates Fed funds futures pricing a 74.4% probability of unchanged rates at January’s meeting, up from roughly 70% the previous week.
Asian Economic Data Reflects Softer Growth Momentum
China’s economic indicators weakened in November. The National Bureau of Statistics reported retail sales advanced just 1.3% year-over-year, falling short of the 2.9% projection and October’s 2.9% reading. Industrial production accelerated 4.8% annually, below the 5.0% forecast and prior 4.9% level.
Fixed asset investment disappointed on a year-to-date basis, registering -2.6% compared to expectations of -2.3%, with October’s figure at -1.7%. This suggests capital expenditure momentum continues facing headwinds.
Australia’s manufacturing sector showed marginal improvement, with the S&P Global Manufacturing PMI edging up to 52.2 in December from 51.6 previously. However, the services segment retreated to 51.0 from 52.8, while the composite index descended to 51.1 from 52.6, indicating broad-based economic softness.
On the domestic front, Australia’s unemployment rate remained stationary at 4.3% in November, outperforming the 4.4% market expectation. However, employment contracted by 21.3K in November after October’s revised gain of 41.1K, significantly undershooting the 20K forecast.
Technical Positioning Indicates Further Downside Risk
The AUD/USD pair trades below the 0.6600 technical confluence level, having declined through its ascending channel trend on the daily timeframe. The pair’s position below the nine-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) reinforces weakening short-term momentum.
Should selling pressure persist, the pair could decline toward the psychological 0.6500 mark, with the six-month low of 0.6414—established on August 21—providing the next technical floor. To the upside, initial resistance emerges at the nine-day EMA positioned at 0.6619. A recovery penetrating this level could permit movement toward the three-month high of 0.6685, with 0.6707 (the highest level since October 2024) representing subsequent resistance. An extended rally would potentially carry the pair toward the upper ascending channel boundary near 0.6760.
Relative Currency Performance
In broader currency movements, the Australian Dollar displayed the weakest performance against the Japanese Yen among major pairs. USD marginally declined 0.02%, while EUR advanced 0.03%. GBP retreated 0.09%, with JPY edging up 0.01%. The CAD gained 0.07%, and AUD rose 0.19% against the CHF while losing 0.07% on a weighted basis. These currency dynamics reflect shifting risk sentiment and divergent central bank trajectories—patterns that will likely continue shaping exchange rate direction in coming sessions.