
PT Solid Gold Berjangka | AUD/USD: Consolidation seems the name of the game
AUD/USD SOLID GOLD BERJANGKA, SG BERJANGKA , SOLID GROUP, PT SGB , SGB
Solid Gold Berjangka | AUD/USD came under further downside pressure on Thursday, adding to Wednesday’s retracement and briefly dipping below the key support at 0.6400 the figure. The pair’s pullback came despite decent losses in the Greenback and firmer Australian labour market report.
AUD/USD slipped under renewed selling pressure despite a continued softening in the US Dollar (USD) on Thursday. The Australian Dollar (AUD) continued to fade part of Tuesday’s sharp rebound, this time retreating below its critical 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) near 0.6460.
Traders appear increasingly focused on the uncertainty surrounding the recently announced US–China trade agreement, particularly over its long-term viability and the potential for a broader resolution. Progress on that front could offer support to the Aussie, given Australia’s close economic ties with China.
The Chinese factor
On the monetary policy side, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) implemented a suite of targeted easing measures in response to sluggish domestic data. These included a cut to the 7-day reverse repo rate, a reduction in the reserve requirement ratio (RRR), increased lending quotas, and sector-specific rate adjustments.
China’s latest inflation figures highlight the deflationary undertone, with consumer prices edging up just 0.1% in April from the previous month and slipping 0.1% year-on-year — underscoring weak demand conditions despite modest trade optimism.
Moving forward, the PBoC is widely anticipated to keep its 1-Year and 5-Year Loan Prime Rate (LPR) unchanged at 3.10% and 3.60%, respectively, at its May 20 event.
Central banks’ view: Opposite sides?
Meanwhile, diverging signals from central banks are also shaping AUD/USD dynamics. Both the Federal Reserve (Fed) and the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) have held rates steady, but their policy tones are diverging.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a measured, slightly hawkish stance, signalling a wait-and-see approach on rate cuts. RBA Governor Michele Bullock, however, pointed to persistent inflation and a tight labour market as justification for keeping the cash rate at 4.10%.
Markets continue to price in a potential 25 basis point cut from the RBA at its 20 May meeting, although expectations for deeper easing have been scaled back. Forecasts now suggest a total of 125 basis points in cuts over the coming year — down from earlier projections.
In the US, softer April inflation data have prompted speculation over a possible Fed rate cut as early as September.
Reinforcing the RBA’s prudent stance, April’s labour market report in Oz saw the Unemployment Rate hold steady at 4.1%, while the Employment Change increased by 89.0K individuals, and the Participation Rate ticked higher to 67.1%. Further domestic data showed the Consumer Inflation Expectations eased to 4.1% in May, according to the Melbourne Institute.
Source: Fxstreet