AUD/USD: Sellers retarget the 200-day SMA
- James Lee

- Nov 5
- 3 min read
The intense sell-off in the risk-associated universe weighs heavily on the Aussie Dollar on Tuesday, sending AUD/USD to the 0.6480 area, or two-week lows, against the backdrop of a firmer Greenback. Meanwhile, the RBA’s hawkish hold earlier on Tuesday remains unable to lend some legs to the AUD so far.
AUD/USD Technical Overview

The Aussie Dollar remained on the back foot in the area of two-week lows, largely in response to dynamics around the US Dollar, while the hawkish hold by the RBA somewhat limited the losses.
The continuation of the selling bias could motivate AUD/USD to retest its critical 200-day SMA at 0.6443, just above the October base at 0.6440 (October 14). Extra losses could pave the way for a move toward the August valley at 0.6414 (August 21), before the June trough of 0.6372 (June 23).
Occasional bullish attempts, on the other hand, should challenge the October peak of 0.6629 (October 1). Once cleared, the pair could head toward the 2025 top of 0.6707 (September 17), followed by the 2024 ceiling at 0.6942 (September 30), and the 0.7000 threshold.
Momentum indicators keep pointing southwards: the Relative Strength Index (RSI) loses further ground and approaches 43, suggesting room for further downside. In addition, the Average Directional Index (ADX) around 16 indicates a trend that lacks juice.
The bottom line
For now, AUD/USD remains stuck in a 0.6400–0.6700 range, waiting for a clear catalyst, whether from China’s data, the Fed’s next step, the RBA’s tone, or a shift in the broader US–China trade backdrop.
Fundamental Overview
The Australian Dollar (AUD) carried Monday’s gloomy tone into Tuesday, pushing AUD/USD back below the 0.6500 mark and to new two-week troughs.
This marks the pair’s fifth straight daily decline, once again driven by a stronger US Dollar (USD) as traders weigh the odds that the Federal Reserve (Fed) might hold off on rate cuts at its December meeting.
Meanwhile, uncertainty around the still unresolved US federal government shutdown continues to sour risk sentiment, keeping the Greenback underpinned.
Australia: resilience with a few cracks showing
Australia’s economy isn’t exactly booming, but it’s proving more resilient than expected. The October PMIs painted a mixed picture: manufacturing slipped back below 50 to 49.7 (from 51.4), while services improved slightly to 53.1 (from 52.4).
Additionally, Retail Sales rose 1.2% in June, and the August trade surplus narrowed only slightly to A$1.25 billion. Business investment picked up in Q2, helping GDP grow 0.6% on the quarter and 1.1% on a yearly basis. It’s not spectacular, but it does show there’s still some underlying momentum.
That said, the labour market is starting to show a few signs of fatigue. Unemployment edged up to 4.5% in September (from 4.3%), and job growth slowed to 14.9K. Nothing alarming yet, but the pace of hiring seems to be cooling.
RBA keeps it cool
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) held rates steady at 3.60% for a second consecutive meeting earlier on Tuesday, just as markets expected. The decision was unanimous and came with a clear signal: the RBA isn’t in a hurry to move either way.
The central bank acknowledged slightly firmer inflation pressures and still sees the labour market as relatively tight, despite a small rise in unemployment. Governor Michele Bullock described policy as “pretty close to neutral” and said there’s no clear bias toward tightening or easing.
She also noted that the 75 basis points of cuts already delivered haven’t fully filtered through the economy yet. Policymakers will stay alert to any signs that demand is running ahead of supply. For now, markets expect only about 3 basis points of easing by the December 9 meeting, and roughly 13 basis points by early 2026
China still sets the tone
Australia’s outlook remains tied to China’s economic pulse. Chinese GDP grew 4.0% in the year to Q3, while retail sales rose 3.0% over the same period. Still, PMI figures were mixed, as manufacturing stayed below 50, and services hovered near that line.
The trade surplus narrowed from $103.33 billion to $90.45 billion in September, while CPI remained negative at –0.3% YoY in September. Earlier last month, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) left its Loan Prime Rates (LPR) unchanged at 3.00% (one-year) and 3.50% (five-year), as expected.




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