AUD/USD extends losing streak for fourth trading day, Fed Powell’s speech in focus
- James Lee

- Aug 22, 2025
- 3 min read
The AUD/USD pair extends its losing streak for the fourth trading day on Thursday. The Aussie pair slides to near 0.6415 in the European trading session, the lowest level seen in almost two months. The Australian Dollar faces selling pressure even as preliminary Australian S&P Global PMI data for August came in stronger.
AUD/USD Technical Overview

Resistance sits at the 2025 ceiling of 0.6625 (July 24), ahead of the November 2024 high at 0.6687 (November 7). Above there, the psychological 0.7000 is the big target for bulls.
Support is layered at the August low of 0.6414 (August 21), prior to the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 0.6384, and the June floor at 0.6372 (June 23).
Momentum remains sluggish: the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has slipped to around 38, while the Average Directional Index (ADX) is near 19 points to a trend which seems to be strengthening.
Outlook: Stuck for now
For the time being, AUD/USD looks boxed in between 0.6400 and 0.6600. Breaking out of that range may require a stronger catalyst: firmer Chinese data, a shift in Fed policy, or a new steer from the RBA.
Fundamental Overview
The Australian Dollar (AUD) stays under pressure on Thursday, with AUD/USD slipping toward two-month lows near the 0.6400 support. It was the pair’s fourth straight daily decline, this time amid a solid performance of the US Dollar (USD).
In the meantime, traders weighed lingering geopolitical tensions in combination with persistent unease surrounding the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) independence, all ahead of the speech by Chair Jerome Powell at the Jackson Hole Symposium on Friday.
Inflation: Cooling, but slowly
Australia’s inflation story continues to ease, though the pace is hardly dramatic. Q2 Consumer Price Index (CPI) came in at 0.7% QoQ and 2.1% YoY, while June’s Monthly CPI Indicator edged down to 1.9%. Progress, yes, but more of a gentle step down than a sharp retreat.
Elsewhere, the economy looks sturdier. Advanced August PMIs showed manufacturing extending its recovery above the 50 line to 52.9, services improving to 55.1, and retail sales rising 1.2% in June. Trade also helped, with the surplus jumping to A$5.365 billion from A$1.604 billion in May.
The labour market remains firm. July’s unemployment dipped to 4.2%, with 24.5K jobs added and participation steady at 67%.
RBA: Cautious hands on the wheel
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) trimmed the Official Cash Rate (OCR) by 25 bps earlier this month to 3.60%, broadly in line with expectations, and lowered its end-2026 forecast to 2.9% from 3.2%. Growth forecasts for 2025 were also shaved to 1.7% from 2.1%, citing global headwinds. Unemployment and core inflation projections for late 2025, however, stayed put at 4.3% and 2.6%.
Governor Michele Bullock resisted pressure for a bigger half-point cut, stressing that policy is “data-dependent, not data-point dependent.” Markets now see another 25 basis points of easing by the November 5 meeting, effectively another quarter-point move.
China: The decisive variable
China’s outlook remains patchy. Q2 GDP printed at 5.2% YoY and industrial output grew 7%, but retail sales again undershot the 5% line. Earlier in the week, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) left its one- and five-year Loan Prime Rates (LPRs) unchanged at 3.00% and 3.50%, as expected.
Other data was less encouraging: the official manufacturing PMI slid to 49.3, non-manufacturing slipped to 50.1, and Caixin readings told a similar story. July trade data showed the surplus narrowing to $98.24 billion, with exports up 7.2% and imports up 4.1%. Inflation barely moved, underlining persistent deflationary pressures.
Positioning: Bears hold the upper hand
Speculators remain firmly against the Aussie. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) figures through August 12 showed net shorts swelling to nearly 88K contracts, the heaviest since April 2024, while open interest climbed to 171.3K, marking multi-week highs.




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