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Analysis

AUD suffers most in first week of 2020

Sean MacLean
Research Strategist
Jan 9, 2020
The Australian dollar suffered its heaviest loss since April 2019 on Tuesday.

AUDUSD closed at 0.68684: 2.3% lower than its multi-month high 0.70319 on 31 December 2019. Tuesday was the Aussie’s fifth consecutive day of losses, making it the worst performing G10 currency in the last five days.

AUDUSD daily chart
Source: Bloomberg

The AUD gained late December on the back of gentle USD selloffs, soon to be pulled back from its gains amid the devastating Australian bushfire crisis. The greenback also started a comeback as global manufacturing data started to look up, despite last week’s ISM print: the lowest since 2009.

Then headlines reporting that Iran had fired rockets at a US-Iraqi air base, saw investors seek safe havens as tensions ramped up. This weighed on the Aussie dollar, which dropped to a three-week low of 0.6850 before bouncing back on better-than-expected Building Approvals (-3.7% vs -11.7% forecast).

Another downside risk is increased expectations of a rate cut at the RBA’s next policy meeting on 4 February. Implied probability of a 25 basis point cut sits currently at 63.8%.

AUDUSD daily chart

On the daily chart, AUDUSD is pulling back to the 100-day EMA, and testing the 61.8% Fib retracement level of the rally that started late November. A break below here should pave the way to testing 0.6848, the long-term downtrend since December 2018.

Keep an eye on the US-Iran tensions, as heightened conflict will weigh further on the AUD. Also watch for Australian Westpac Consumer Confidence due tomorrow.

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