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A mercurial President Trump continues to produce choppy and challenging trading conditions. AUD/USD is volatile and holding to the higher side of its new year ranges. US Jan CPI and Fed Chair Powell's testimony will compete for headlines with tariffs.

Aussie running the tariff gauntlet

A mercurial President Trump continues to produce choppy and challenging trading conditions. This time last week AUD/USD was pressured by the imminent prospect of a 25% tariff on Canada and Mexico. 

 

 

That saw AUD/USD plummet 130pts+ to a low of 0.6088 in early trading Monday. But rapid escalation gave way to equally rapid de-escalation. Canada and Mexico offered relatively minor gestures on border security and the threat of tariffs was delayed for a month. AUD/USD regained its poise and traded up into the 0.6250 to 0.6300 area for the rest of the week.

 

 

For the week ahead, a narrow path seemed to be clearing for some “normalcy” and a focus on more conventional topics - US CPI and Chair Powell’s semi-annual testimony. 

 

 

But President Trump caught markets napping yet again at the start of local trading, unveiling plans to impose a 25% tariff on all US imports of steel and aluminium. AUD/USD’s slip was milder this time, from 0.6265 to 0.6231, a decline of -0.5%. AUD/USD rebounded quickly too.

 

 

Australia is mostly a by-stander here compared to Canada. Canada accounts for about 40% of US aluminium imports and 25% of steel imports, a so a rebound for AUD/USD makes some sense. PM Albanese is “scheduled” to speak with President Donald Trump and lobby for an exemption tariffs on steel and aluminium too.

 

 

Tariff risks will continue to loom over AUD. While Canada and Mexico have a brief respite, China hasn’t been as fortunate, with an additional 10% tariff imposed as well as nullification of the “de minimis exemption”, which up until recently exempted all imported goods under USD$800 from tariffs. This will hit mostly smaller scale online retail shipments from China to the US. USD/CNH spiked to 7.3240, however China was quick to retaliate with a tariff on $14bn worth of US goods. President Trump is also threatening reciprocal tariffs, with details potentially released this week.

 

 

Thus far, President Trump's hard-line rapid escalation and de-escalation has produced mostly whip-saw, with target nations able to postpone tariffs with minor gestures in non-economic areas. President Trump evidently favours using tariffs for leverage when it comes to non-economic policy goals. These dynamics will challenged after 1 April, when US agencies report back to Trump with a sweeping investigation into all instances of unfair and unbalanced trade practices, alongside recommended actions to "remedy" these issues. This report likely lays the foundation for a change of tack - a more disciplined, structured and sustained tariff impost. De-escalation will be slower to come since ‘trade fairness’ is inherently harder to remedy with quick concessions.

 

 

Despite all the volatility, AUD/EUR and AUD/GBP are up for the week, +1.9% and +1.7% respectively. Key risk barometer AUD/JPY saw a choppy down move over the last week to a low of 94.37, as BoJ rate hike bets continue to firm up. AUD/NZD is up around +0.7% for the week, just shy of 1.1100.

 

 

US January payrolls report closed out last week. Jobs growth disappointed slightly, printing at 143k vs a consensus at 175k and a 307k prior. But recent months were revised up by 100k and average hourly earnings grew a strong 0.5% m/m. The unemployment fell to 4.0% from 4.1%, but annual revisions to US population estimates mean that is not directly comparable to recent months. All told it was a broadly solid report, keeping the resiliency story alive and the Fed on hold a while longer.

 

 

Tariff headlines will continue to a strong grip on markets but US Jan CPI will temporarily steal the limelight this week. Markets expect a 0.3% m/m increase in the core rate. Fed Chair Powell appears before Congress for his semi-annual testimony too. Fed officials have sent a strong message that they need to see “real progress” on inflation or labour market weakness to consider adjusting rates.

 

 

Domestic data remains fairly quiet this week - Feb Westpac consumer confidence and NAB business confidence surveys.

Tuesday

  • Australia Feb Westpac Consumer Confidence
  • Australia Feb NAB Business Confidence
  • US Fed Chair Powell gives monetary policy testimony to Senate Banking Committee
  • UK BoE Governor Bailey speaks

Wednesday

  • Australia Q4 ’24 Home Loans
  • US Jan CPI
  • US Fed Chair Powell testifies to House Financial Services Panel

Thursday

  • Australia Feb Consumer Inflation Expectations
  • UK Q4 2024 GDP
  • US Jan PPI

Friday

  • Eurozone Q4 2024 GDP
  • NZ Jan PMIs, Food Prices
  • US Jan Retail Sales

 

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