Aussie bulls press the advantage
AUD/USD starts the week in a bullish mood, trading as high as 0.6550 Monday, levels not seen since late November 2024. Long weekends in the US and UK, rapid EU tariff de-escalation and thin global data calendars set the stage for calmer trading conditions in the week ahead.

Aussie bulls press the advantage
AUD/USD starts the week in a bullish mood, trading as high as 0.6550 Monday, levels not seen since late November 2024. Long weekends in the US and UK, rapid EU tariff de-escalation and thin global data calendars set the stage for calmer trading conditions in the week ahead.
AUD/USD's lacklustre moniker has been well deserved in 2025. The pair has risen 3.9% since President Trump's 20 Jan 2025 inauguration. That is nothing to sneeze at, but pales next to G10 peers. The more liquid, viable and immediate alternatives to the USD, such as EUR, has rallied 9.3% since Trump's inauguration, while JPY has firmed 8.9% against the USD. Among the G10, AUD has posted the smallest advance against the USD. Intriguingly, AUD/USD has also been bested by a diverse group of emerging market currencies, spanning Eastern Europe, Latin America and Asia.
But the vibe in FX markets continues to rapidly evolve. Despite a dovish RBA rate cut and broadly steady commodity prices, "also ran" AUD/USD is suddenly looking more spirited and energetic, breaking to its highest levels in 6mths.
President Trump said he would slap a 50% tariff on the EU on Friday, in response to a lack of progress on trade/tariff negotiations. While the headlines landed negatively on markets, and initially saw the USD firm, FX markets shook off the news quickly. The "sell America" trade was gathering renewed energy all last week, on the back growing US fiscal sustainability concerns. Once markets digested the EU tariff threat, the "sell America" trade gathered fresh legs.
A weaker USD, alongside softening risk appetite, is of course a very unfamiliar market dynamic. Once reliable correlations have been breaking down for a while, but in the case of AUD/USD it was landing very sporadically. Not on Friday. After a kneejerk 40 pip fall on the EU tariff headlines AUD re-grouped and closed the week on a high - just shy of 0.6500, a gain of 1.2% on the day.
USD negatives continue to build. After April's tariff tumult, May has been all about US fiscal risks. Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill", Moody's downgrading of US' sovereign Aaa credit rating and a poorly received 20-year bond auction coalesced to give new energy to the "sell America" trade, keeping the dollar under pressure.
Strictly speaking the US fiscal picture has not deteriorated as much as the price action would have you believe. Pre-election blueprints were flagging an even larger deterioration in US fiscal metrics over the next 10 years under a Trump presidency - USD5-7trn in larger cumulative deficits over 10 years, even with higher tariff revenues and cuts to Medicaid. A permanent extension of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act has been the base case for a long time. In the event the US House Bill is expected to add USD3.8trn to US deficits over the next decade.
But this was all before the US become a less "reliable" actor on the global trade and defence stage. Global markets now demand a risk premium of sorts. Higher yields are usually good for the currency in question. Across the G10, we rarely need to distinguish whether higher yields are coming from improving growth expectations and central bank re-pricing. But the flurry of risks surrounding the US economy under Trump have seen investors pricing a greater risk premium into US assets. This in turn has caused the US rates-USD correlation to unwind and so despite the recent strength in yields, the USD has weakened, substantially.
The RBA delivered a 25bp cut last week, in line with expectations. However Governor Bullock was unexpectedly dovish, commenting that global uncertainty had added to the decision to cut, and that the board had debated the merits of a potentially larger 50bp cut. She also commented that the narrow path analogy was finally being retired and if CPI continues to come down, the RBA can cut again. AUD dipped to 0.6390 following the decision in response to market repricing 3 cuts in for 2025, however recovered quickly above 0.6400.
AUD saw a decent retracement across a range of crosses early last week, with this pullback extending post-RBA policy meeting, however the AUD crosses have since stabilised. AUD/NZD is down 0.52% near 1.0830, AUD/EUR is higher 0.54% trading near 0.57 and AUD/JPY is up 0.69%, near 92.90.
Gold climbed more than 2% Friday testing $3365/oz following new tariff threats on the EU and US fiscal pressures which saw a broad sell off against the USD. Iron ore fell 5% last week, with the June SGX contract down $1.10 from the same time Friday. Metals rose on the threats of fresh tariffs from Trump with copper rising by 1.15% at $9,610 but aluminium up by just 0.3%.
Turning to the week ahead, Aussie April CPI (market f/c: 2.3%, Westpac f/c: 1.9%) will be the key focus and is broadly expected to print within the RBA's 2-3% target band. April retail sales are also due (market f/c: 0.3%, Westpac f/c: 0.1%). While weather-related disruptions fizzled out in April, holiday-related volatility may have taken its place. key inputs into Q1 GDP are also on the docket - Q1 CAPEX and construction work done.
In the wake of last week's dovish RBA markets think the Bank can deliver an immediate follow up, i.e. without another quarterly CPI to hand - pricing in 17bp worth of rate cut risk for early July. This week's local data will help refine those odds, before more crucial Q1 GDP (4 June) and May labour force figures (19 June) have a more decisive say.
Tuesday
- China Apr Industrial Profits
- US May Consumer Confidence, Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey
- Fedspeak; Barkin
Wednesday
- Australia Apr CPI, Q1 Construction Work Done
- RBNZ Monetary Policy Meeting
- US May Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index
- FOMC May 6-7 Meeting Minutes
Thursday
- Australia Q1 Private Capital Expenditure
- US Q1 GDP (second)
Friday
- Australia Apr Retail Sales, Building Approvals, Private Sector Credit
- US Apr Personal Income & Spending, Core PCE, May University of Michigan Survey
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