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SAICHILD FINANCIAL HOLDINGS LIMITED

Australian Dollar holds losses as US Dollar holds steady due to sustained risk aversion

  • Writer: James Lee
    James Lee
  • Jul 23
  • 3 min read

The Australian Dollar edges lower against the US Dollar on Tuesday after two days of losses. The AUD/USD pair remains subdued following the release of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) Meeting Minutes. The majority believed to await confirmation on inflation slowdown before easing.

 

AUD/USD Technical Overview

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Upside hurdles sit at 0.6590 (2025 peak), then 0.6687 (November 7, 2024), and, beyond that, the psychological 0.7000 level.

 

On the other hand, support rests at 0.6454 (July low) and the 200‑day SMA at 0.6398.

 

The momentum appears to have increased: the Relative Strength Index (RSI) is nearing the 55 level, while the Average Directional Index (ADX) hovers around 16, indicating a trend that lacks conviction.

 

Bottom line

The Aussie appears range-bound until Beijing provides a clearer growth signal or trade tensions introduce a new challenge. The RBA is signalling gentle nudges, not bold shifts, which leaves traders hunting for the next catalyst.

 

Fundamental Overview

The Australian Dollar (AUD) maintained its bullish momentum for the third consecutive day on Tuesday, lifting AUD/USD further north of the key 0.6500 mark on Tuesday, riding a wave of US Dollar weakness.

 

Jobs miss keeps rate‑cut talk alive

Last week’s labour market data offered little encouragement. Unemployment edged up to 4.3%, while the economy added a paltry 2K jobs. Participation nudged to 67.1%, and consumer inflation expectations cooled to 4.7% in July from 5.0 % a month earlier.

 

Those numbers help explain the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) surprise decision earlier this month to leave its cash rate at 3.85%. Six board members voted to wait; three wanted an immediate 25‑bp cut. Governor Michele Bullock brushed off the split as a matter of “timing, not direction” and hinted that a softer second‑quarter CPI print would clear the runway for easing.

The RBA Minutes from the July 8 policy meeting indicated that further easing is anticipated in the future. It was noted that all members reached a consensus regarding the outlook, indicating that underlying inflation was expected to decline further in year-ended terms, which would justify some additional reduction in interest rates over time.

 

The Minutes indicated that a minority of members believed that the “downside risks to the economic outlook” provided justification for lowering the cash rate target at this meeting. A majority of members expressed the view that lowering the cash rate for a third time within four meetings would not align with what they described as “a cautious and gradual” approach to easing monetary policy.

 

Furthermore, the RBA is likely to resume easing at its August 12 gathering, as futures markets fully anticipate a 25 basis point cut in August, along with a total easing of 75 basis points over the next 12 months.

 

China’s two‑speed recovery

Australia's largest trading partner continues to present a mixed picture.

Chinese GDP grew 1.1% in Q2 (5.2% YoY), factory output is humming at almost 7 %, yet retail sales are stuck below 5% as households stockpile savings. A chunky June trade surplus of $114.8 bn underlines an economy coasting rather than sprinting.

 

In addition, and as expected, the People’s Bank of China PboC) left its one‑ and five‑year Loan Prime Rates (LPRs) unchanged at 3.00 % and 3.50 %, respectively.

 

Diverging policy paths

While the RBA and the Fed have both paused, the similarities end there. Washington frets fresh tariffs could reignite inflation, and a tick‑up in June CPI suggests that risk is real. Any renewed price pressure on either side of the Pacific could quickly reopen the policy gap.

 

Speculators turn their backs

CFTC data show sentiment has soured: net shorts ballooned to roughly 75K contracts in the week to 15 July, even as total open interest slid to a four‑week low near 150.5K contracts.

 

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