AUD/NZD Transfer

Price in the Australian Dollar (AUD), New Zealand Dollar (NZD) cross this week is moving within Fibonacci key levels between 0.9220 (1.0850) and 0.9260 (1.0800). The Aussie may come under further pressures this week as investors digest Chinese economic woes. Of consideration are cloudy metal prices led by iron ore coming off over 3% in the last 30 days and a dovish RBA. NZ Retails Sales prints tomorrow, expected to come in at -0.4% for the June quarter.

Current Level: 1.0818
Resistance: 1.0740
Support: 1.0910
Last Weeks Range: 1.0779 – 1.0876

NZD/AUD Transfer

Price in the Australian Dollar (AUD), New Zealand Dollar (NZD) cross this week is moving within Fibonacci key levels between 0.9220 (1.0850) and 0.9260 (1.0800). The Aussie may come under further pressures this week as investors digest Chinese economic woes. Of consideration are cloudy metal prices led by iron ore coming off over 3% in the last 30 days and a dovish RBA. NZ Retails Sales prints tomorrow, expected to come in at -0.4% for the June quarter.

Current Level: 0.9239
Resistance: 0.9310
Support: 0.9165
Last Weeks Range: 0.9194 – 0.9277

 

NZD/USD Transfer

Downside pressures in the New Zealand Dollar (NZD) eased slightly Monday against the US Dollar (USD) with price settling around the weekly open at 0.5925 this morning. With Fed’s Powell expected to deliver a hawkish speech later this week at the Jackson Hole event around how much interest rates could go in order to drag down inflation his comments may spook the markets. After all, recently we have been prepped for interest rate cuts in 2024 something markets had originally been forecasting to happen as soon as late this year. Rhetoric suggesting the fight against inflation is “far from over’ will most likely be the theme. NZ Retail Sales prints tomorrow, predicted to come in poor and later this week we have US consumer sentiment.

Current Level: 0.5927
Resistance: 0.6400
Support: 0.5900
Last Weeks Range: 0.5901 – 0.5994

FX Update: China worries markets

Market Overview

Key Points:

• The New Zealand Dollar and Australian Dollar have both kicked off the week wobbly based on last week’s bearish pressures.
• The New Zealand Trade deficit widened from 0.11B to 1.11B in July as imports dropped 16% and exports fell 14%
• German producer prices fell 1.1% m/m for July vs 0.1% expected.
• US Treasury yields rise again, the 10-year bond rising to a 2007 high.
• Latest signs are that the Bank of Canada (BoC) will remain on hold at the September meeting.
• Chinese growth forecast for 2023 shifts from 5.2% to 4.8%, meanwhile the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) cuts their prime 1-year rate to 3.45% from 3.55% – no cut to the 5 year came as a surprise.
• The British Pound (GBP) has been the strongest currency this week with the Australian Dollar (AUD) the worst performer.

Major Announcements last week:
• Chinese Retail Sales y/y 2.5% vs 4.2% expected
• US Retail Sales for July 0.7% vs 0.4%
• RBNZ retain cash rate at 5.5%
• UK CPI y/y 6.8% vs 6.7% predicted
• Australia unemployment rate 3.7% up from 3.6%

AUD/EUR Transfer

Australian unemployment clicked higher to 3.7% from June’s 3.5%, the Chinese economic outlook has worsened, and the RBA were dovish leaning all helped to push the Australian Dollar (AUD) to new lows against the Euro (EUR) this morning clocking 0.5860 (1.7060) a 3 May 2020 level. German economic sentiment released slightly better than expected at -12.3 vs -15.0 which is bizarre as the economic situation has worsened lately. We expect the Euro has further to run before any change in momentum is seen.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDEUR 0.5897    EURAUD 1.6957

The interbank range this week has been: AUDEUR 0.5860- 0.5974    EURAUD 1.6738- 1.7063

AUD/GBP Transfer

The English Pound (GBP) continued to dominate moves across the main board of currencies, extending its dominance over the Australian Dollar (AUD) in a big way this week. The biggest weekly move in a year by the cross sees it trading at 0.5015 (1.9950) this morning compared to the weekly open price of 0.5130 (1.9490). Great for sellers of GBP- not so flash if you are buying. A bumper UK jobs earning number followed by an improving inflation read – 6.8% y/y in July down from June’s 7.9% won’t be enough for the Bank of England who will almost certainly bump their cash rate 50 points next month to 5.75%. There isn’t much standing in the way of the cross testing the April 2020 level of 0.4950 (2.0200) over the following days.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDGBP 0.5031    GBPAUD 1.9876

The interbank range this week has been: AUDGBP 0.5007- 0.5130    GBPAUD 1.9487- 1.9966

AUD/USD Transfer

The US Dollar (USD) has lengthened out its hold over the Australian Dollar (AUD) to 0.6400 levels this morning earlier yesterday reaching 0.6365. The cross has cleared all remaining support levels of late with the remaining significant long-term support remaining at 0.6140. A mix of factors hasn’t helped the Aussie of late- “risk” markets were softer overnight, Chinese outlook fears and a dovish RBA all contributing. On the plus side Australian unemployment jumped from 3.5% to 3.7% strengthening the case for the RBA to hold rates for some time ahead. Meanwhile the Fed minutes wash up confirmed the Federal Reserve still sees inflation risks ahead and a potential need to raise rates if required. Sell the dip, buy the rip.

The current interbank midrate is: AUDUSD 0.6419

The interbank range this week has been: AUDUSD 0.6363- 0.6520

NZD/AUD Transfer

As we said earlier the Australian Dollar (AUD) came under pressure, but it wasn’t until late Wednesday we saw a shift off 0.9210 (1.0860) levels back to 0.9235 (1.0830). NZ Retail Sales disappointed in the June quarter coming in at -1.0% vs -0.4% the 3rd consecutive decline representing consumers leaving money in their pocket, the biggest contributor being food and beverage with the sector struggling. On the whole, the pair remains well within recent ranges. Next week’s economic docket looks super thin, more of the same looks to be the likely theme.

The current interbank midrate is: NZDAUD 0.9225    AUDNZD 1.0833

The interbank range this week has been: NZDAUD 0.9192- 0.9266    AUDNZD 1.0792- 1.0879

Key Points This Week

FX Update

Key Points:

  • The Reserve Bank of New Zealand holds interest rates at 5.50%
  • Japanese “core-core” inflation – (excluding food and energy) rises to 4.3%
  • Gold has fallen to the lowest level since March- 1980 per ounce.
  • Chinese Industrial production released down on expectations in the second quarter, with domestic indicators like real estate and demand for exports also taking hits.
  • The US 30-year bond traded to 4.42% overnight breaking above last year’s high and matching 2011 levels. This is starting to weigh on equity markets with US indices all coming off recent highs.
  • The British Pound (GBP) has been the strongest currency this week with the Australian Dollar (AUD) the worst performer.

NZD/USD Transfer

The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) continued its downward spiral late last week reaching 0.5980 closing below key support at the big figure- 0.6000 against the US Dollar (USD). Monday’s action has extended moves to the downside clocking 0.5950 in early Tuesday. To be honest, the kiwi looks “down for the count” at the moment trading into thin air through 0.6000 was a major signal we could see bigger moves into the 0.50’s. It’s a busy week of releases for the pair with a slew of data to publish. The RBNZ official cash rate is expected to hold rates at 5.50% followed by Fed minutes Thursday. At some point the NZD will bounce higher, buyers of USD should grab the spikes.

Current Level: 0.5974
Resistance: 0.6360
Support: 0.5930
Last Weeks Range: 0.5974 – 0.6117