Aussie dollar faces inflation test after stellar year-end rally

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The Australian dollar’s late 2023 rally faces a new hurdle with inflation data expected to strengthen the case for earlier interest-rate cuts by the Reserve Bank. The Aussie jumped nearly 10% against the greenback from late October through December as the RBA sounded hawkish while traders priced Federal Reserve rate cuts this year. The rally may struggle to extend if November inflation data provides room for the central bank to soften its tone and prompts the swap market to price the first RBA interest-rate cut earlier than in June.
“Market pricing for RBA interest rate cuts looks far too hawkish with them priced to cut very little in 2024/2025 versus peers,” said Tim Baker, Sydney-based head of macro research at Deutsche Bank AG. “Australia’s inflation overshoot isn’t that different to peers. If inflation is on the softer side, the market will gain conviction that the RBA is done.”
Australia’s consumer inflation slowed 4.5% November as it moderated for a second straight month, according to a median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. Weak inflation would validate asset managers’ long-held pessimism on the Aussie. Even though they trimmed these positions to half of what they were in mid-September, they still held 42,658 contracts betting against the currency as of January 2, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. These investors may be taking solace from the fact that the Aussie dollar’s slow stochastics, a momentum indicator has also turned bearish, after the currency’s rally stalled under resistance at 69 US cents.
Baker sees the Aussie dollar weakening to 65 US cents this quarter. It closed last week at 67.13 cents last week, easing from a five-month high of 68.71 touched in late December as traders grew concerned that the Fed rate cuts this year may not be as deep as expected. US inflation data, also due this week, may put additional pressure on the Aussie dollar if it spurs investors to further dial back on their expectations for Fed rate cuts.

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