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The Australian dollar loses grip after strong US jobs report

The Australian dollar held onto the 0.7100 handle early in the week, but momentum faded quickly. A stronger-than-expected US May payrolls report pushed yields higher, while AI-related concerns and rising US rate expectations triggered a broad equity sell-off. Risk assets came under pressure, with AUD/USD sliding more than US1cent into Friday’s close and touching a two-month low of 0.7018 on Monday’s open. Markets have since stabilised, with AUD/USD starting the holiday-shortened week off its lows near 0.7050. That said, the AUD’s bullish tone has softened as global central banks reprice rate expectations higher. This week is headlined by US May CPI alongside ECB and BoC policy meetings, though focus locally will quickly shift to next week’s June RBA meeting.

The Australian dollar loses grip after strong US jobs report

The Australian dollar held onto the 0.7100 handle early in the week, but momentum faded quickly. A stronger-than-expected US May payrolls report pushed yields higher, while AI-related concerns and rising US rate expectations triggered a broad equity sell-off. Risk assets came under pressure, with AUD/USD sliding more than US1cent into Friday’s close and touching a two-month low of 0.7018 on Monday’s open.

 

Markets have since stabilised, with AUD/USD starting the holiday-shortened week off its lows near 0.7050. That said, the AUD’s bullish tone has softened as global central banks reprice rate expectations higher. This week is headlined by US May CPI alongside ECB and BoC policy meetings, though focus locally will quickly shift to next week’s June RBA meeting.

US payrolls trigger risk off move 

The Australian dollar traded mostly within a 0.7100–0.7200 range last week before Friday’s US payrolls data disrupted the range. Nonfarm payrolls printed at 172k (vs 88k expected), marking a third consecutive upside surprise, while the unemployment rate held at 4.3%. Gains were driven by leisure and hospitality, local government and healthcare. Data earlier in the week, including US April JOLTS job openings and May ADP employment, also beat expectations, reinforcing the narrative of a resilient US labour market.

 

US 10-year yields traded between 4.42% and 4.51% for much of the week before jumping to 4.57% following the jobs data. The move higher in yields, alongside US-Iran tensions, energy price volatility, elevated US rate expectations and ongoing AI concerns, drove a broad risk-off move.

 

Equities fell sharply, with the S&P 500 down 2% intraday and the Nasdaq dropping 3% on Friday. Risk sentiment carried into Monday’s Asia session, where the KOSPI fell 9% within minutes of the open, triggering a circuit breaker, before stabilising later in the day.

 

Aussie GDP miss - August still in play?

 

Locally, Q1 GDP undershot expectations at 0.3% q/q (vs 0.4%). Growth was supported by data centre investment, but underlying momentum remains soft. Domestic demand was weak, with household consumption partially supported by electricity rebates

 

This combined with weaker April CPI and a lift in the unemployment rate have muddied the waters slightly. However, policy measures such as halving of the fuel excise and removal of the heavy vehicle road user charge are delaying the second-round effects of higher fuel prices – these measures to expire June 30.

 

RBA Gov. Bullock echoed the importance of bringing inflation under control, adding that the RBA is seeing some signs of tightening starting to work. Assist. Gov. Hunter added that Q1 GDP had broadly printed in line with the RBA's expectations. 

 

In Japan, BoJ Governor Ueda signalled a potential June hike and scope for another in 2026. Despite this, USD/JPY has pushed back above 160, nearing prior intervention levels.

 

AUD crosses delivered mixed results over the week. AUD/NZD climbed from 1.20 to 1.2150+ over the week but starts the week slightly heavier, just below 1.2100. AUD/EUR ticked -0.9% lower over the week to 0.6116 and AUD/JPY was down -1.5% trading near 113.00, reflecting hawkish repricing in ECB and BoJ expectations.

 

The week ahead...

Focus turns to US May CPI and ECB/BoC meetings. The ECB is expected to hike in response to higher energy prices. While not the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, CPI will be closely watched ahead of the June FOMC — the first under new Chair Kevin Warsh. Locally, attention is shifting firmly toward next week’s RBA meeting. Markets also remain on the lookout for US-Iran updates. 

Tuesday

  • US Apr Trade Bal. 

Wednesday

  • Japan May PPI
  • China May PPI, CPI
  • US May CPI
  • Bank of Canada Policy Rate Decision

Thursday

  • ECB Policy Rate Decision
  • US May PPI

Friday

  • UK Apr Monthly GDP
  • US Jun Uni. of Michigan Sentiment Survey (Prelim)

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