Author: Dmitri Demidenko - Reviewed by: Jana Kane
The Reserve Bank of Australia intends to raise its key interest rate for the third consecutive time. However, the AUD/USD pair's trajectory will depend on its rhetoric. Will the cycle of monetary tightening continue, or should we expect a pause? Let's analyze the situation and develop a trading plan.
The article covers the following subjects:
- Major Takeaways
- Weekly Fundamental Forecast for Australian Dollar
- Weekly AUDUSD Trading Plan
Major Takeaways
- The Reserve Bank is set to increase the cash rate.
- Australian inflation is slowing down.
- A correction in the S&P 500 will weigh on the aussie.
- Short positions on the AUD/USD pair can be considered with the target of 0.715.
Weekly Fundamental Forecast for Australian Dollar
Buy the rumor, sell the news. The Reserve Bank's third consecutive rate hike at its May 5 meeting — from 4.1% to 4.35% — is most likely already priced into AUD/USD quotes. Expectations of continued monetary tightening have become one of the main drivers behind the Australian dollar's strong performance, ranking second only to the Norwegian krone among G10 currencies. However, nothing lasts forever. Concerns about a pause in the tightening cycle could lead to profit-taking and a pullback.
Central Banks' Interest Rates Source: Bloomberg.
The Reserve Bank of Australia's stance on inflation will be key in shaping the Aussie's trajectory against the US dollar. In March, consumer prices rose by 4.1%, while trimmed-mean CPI increased by 3.5%. Both readings came in below forecasts, as did quarterly inflation. However, they remain above the upper bound of the 2–3% target range, giving both doves and hawks within the central bank grounds to support their positions.
The pro–rate hike camp argues that the conflict in the Middle East could further fuel inflationary pressures that were already building, even without geopolitical factors. In contrast, their opponents contend that slowing economic growth and weak domestic demand will weigh on consumer prices.