- Australian Dollar has suffered extended declines in recent sessions as RBA gains slowly fade.
- PMI figures from Australia reveal weaker-than-expected data.
- Fragility in the Australian economy seems to be driving demand off the Aussie.
In Friday’s session, the Australian Dollar (AUD) intensified its losses against its peers. The AUD/USD duo has been testing its notable support at the 0.6640 threshold, the 20-day Simple Moving Average (SMA). Selling pressure emerged from the Asian markets in light of soft June preliminary PMIs from Judo Bank in Australia. This weakness has been compounded by high US Treasury yields and optimistic PMI data from S&P in the US, lifting the USD.
Notwithstanding certain signs of frailty in Australia’s economic scene, the stubbornly high inflation continues to prompt the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to delay potential rate cuts, potentially offsetting the Aussie’s losses. The RBA is primed to be among the last G10 nation central banks to initiate rate cuts, which might perpetuate the Aussie’s gains.
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