Aussie hits 2-month highs ahead of vital RBA decision
The Australian dollar punched through 65 cents last week, fuelled by a fall in US yields and the US dollar, and the related surge in equity markets. This week’s calendar highlight is the RBA decision but eyes will also remain on the Middle East.

The AUD last week traded to a little above 0.6500, its highest levels since 1 September. A sharp decline in the US dollar played a key role, but other factors were in play.
A check of the G10 over the past week shows the US dollar down notably against all currencies except the Japanese yen, which was about flat, undermined by the Bank of Japan’s cautious policy review.
The Aussie jumped 2.8%, behind only the Kiwi (+3.2%). Both currencies tend to outperform amid broad US dollar declines, especially when risk appetite improves. US equities (S&P 500) rallied strongly every day last week. Earnings reports helped on some days but there were also signs that risk aversion linked to the Middle East conflict was abating.
West Texas intermediate crude oil is almost $2 below the close ahead of the Hamas attack on 7 October, while Brent crude oil is down $7 from its 19 October highs. Analysts are not seeing major supply disruptions at this stage. Moreover, the long-awaited formal speech by Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah did not flag any major escalation of existing hostilities at Israel’s border with Lebanon.
The equity rally is also consistent with the slide in US yields which undermined the greenback. This occurred on just two days: the FOMC decision and the October employment report. The FOMC’s steady hand at 5.25-5.50% was fully expected but markets judged the statement and Chair Powell’s press conference to be a little more dovish, with a particular focus on the idea that high longer term bond yields could reduce the need for another increase in the funds rate.
After some recovery in the USD and bond yields on Thursday, it was back to decline on Friday as US October non-farm payrolls grew 150k versus 180k expected and with -101k in net revisions. The unemployment rate ticked up to 3.9%. US bond yields resumed their FOMC-driven decline, the 10-year Treasury closing the week at 4.57%, down 26 basis points overall, the 2-year Treasury at 4.84%, -16bp. This was the catalyst for AUD to break through 0.6500, backed by the S&P 500 closing with a 5.9% weekly surge.
Last week we saw policy decisions from the Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan and Bank of England, none of which gave the impression that a rate rise was a serious consideration in coming months. In stark contrast, 29 of 32 forecasters (including Westpac) in the Bloomberg survey tip the RBA to decide to raise the cash rate 25bp to 4.35% at Tuesday’s meeting. Money markets price around a two-thirds chance of a hike this week. By May 2024, markets are fully priced for one hike and about 50% priced for another hike.
This has produced sharp swings in yield differentials in the Aussie’s favour, albeit mostly occurring before last week. On the commodity side, spot iron ore prices rose a further 4% or so to above $126, highs since March. Base metals also rose but remain only modestly above year-to-date lows. The share prices of Chinese property-linked companies also suggest ongoing caution over China’s growth prospects.
With the global calendar a lot quieter this week, AUD/USD’s chances of extending its rally to the mid-0.65s or 0.66 (highs since early August) are likely to depend mostly on the RBA decision and the global risk mood.
Event risk
Aust PM Albanese meets with China President Xi in Beijing (Mon), RBA policy decision, Melbourne Cup Day holiday (VIC only), China Oct trade balance (Tue), China Oct consumer and producer prices, Fed Chair Powell speaks (Thu), RBA quarterly Statement on Monetary Policy, UK Q3 GDP, US University of Michigan Nov consumer sentiment (Fri)
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