AUD: Asia Wrap - AUD struggling To Bounce

Jun-30 04:25

The AUD/USD has had a range of 0.6527 - 0.6543 in the Asia- Pac session, it is currently trading around 0.6535, +0.08%. A tight range in a very quiet Asian session, US Equity futures have opened strongly in Asia printing new all-time highs, ESU5 +0.4%, NQU5 +0.5% after Canada rescinds its digital services tax. The AUD has surprisingly had very little reaction to this as it still looks for a catalyst to probe above the 0.6550/0.6600 resistance. CFTC Data shows Asset managers increasing their shorts -36967, the Leveraged community has also added to their shorts -22963. Given how poorly the USD is trading one would expect most of these shorts are being expressed in the crosses where the AUD trades poorly particularly against the EUR and GBP.

  • Private credit rose 0.5% m/m (estimate +0.6%) in May versus +0.7% in April.
  • Melbourne Institute inflation index rose 0.1% m/m in June versus -0.4% in May. Inflation index rose 2.4% y/y versus +2.6% in May.
  • (Dow Jones) “Recent turmoil in global financial markets is fueling overseas demand for New South Wales state government bonds, despite concern about a rise in public-sector debt levels in Australia.”
  • The AUD/USD is attempting to break through the top of its recent range as the pressure on the USD increases.
  • The AUD needs a sustained break above 0.6550/0.6600 to potentially start building momentum for an extended move higher, a close back above 0.6600 and the focus would turn back to 0.6900/0.7000.
  • Options : Closest significant option expiries for NY cut, based on DTCC data: 0.6425(AUD836m). Upcoming Close Strikes : 0.67500(AUD1.27b July 2), 0.6600(AUD907m July3).
  • AUD/JPY - Today's range 94.15 - 94.54, it is trading currently around 94.25. Choppy price action as the pair establishes a range between 92.00 - 96.00. Should risk build on this move, focus could turn back to the 96.00 area.

Fig 1: AUD CFTC Data

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Source: MNI - Market News/Bloomberg Finance L.P

Historical bullets

AUSSIE 10-YEAR TECHS: (M5) Bear Cycle Remains Intact For Now

May-30 22:15
  • RES 3: 96.501 - 76.4% of the Mar 14 - Nov 1 ‘23 bear leg
  • RES 2: 96.207 - 61.8% of the Mar 14 - Nov 1 ‘23 bear leg
  • RES 1: 95.960 - High Apr 7 
  • PRICE: 95.745 @ 14:57 BST May 30
  • SUP 1: 95.415/95.300 - Low May 15 / Low Jan 14  
  • SUP 2: 95.275 - Low Nov 14  (cont) and a key support
  • SUP 3: 94.707 - 1.0% 10-dma envelope

Aussie 10-yr futures rallied well on the RBA rate decision last week, reversing a small part of recent weakness. Recent price action pressured prices through to new pullback lows last week. Next support undercuts at 95.420 (pierced), the Feb 13 low, ahead of 95.275, the Nov 14 low and a key support. Clearance of this level would strengthen a bearish condition. To the upside, a recovery of recent losses would shift attention to resistance at 96.207, a Fibonacci retracement point.

US-JAPAN: Trump To Deliver Remarks On Nippon Steel-US Steel Deal Shortly

May-30 21:01

US President Donald Trump is shortly due to deliver remarks in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he is expected to endorse Nippon Steel's takeover of US Steel. LIVESTREAM The announcement comes as the US and Japan remain far apart on a new bilateral trade deal.

  • Trump said in a Truth Social message on May 23 that the planned partnership "will create at least 70,000 jobs, and add $14 Billion Dollars to the U.S. Economy," over the next 14 months.
  • Semafor writes: “The US government will get a “golden share” in US Steel …, with the power to determine who sits on the board and control over production levels. It’s a dramatic provision that could lay out a roadmap for how deals get done in the Trump administration.”
  • Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba yesterday “expressed determination today to defend rules-based, free and multilateral trade systems and work on expanding the main Asia-Pacific trade group”, per AP.
  • Ishiba said: “High tariffs will not bring economic prosperity. A prosperity built on sacrifices by someone or another country will not make a strong economy.”
  • AP notes: “His comment comes as Japan’s chief tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa travels to Washington, D.C., for a fourth round of talks aiming to convince the U.S. to drop all recent tariff measures. So far Japan has not been successful in gaining U.S. concessions and is reportedly considering purchases of more U.S. farm products and defense equipment as bargaining chips.”
  • Ishiba said after a call with Trump yesterday, “[we now] deeper understanding about each other,” but noted to reporters there has been no change to Japan’s position on the tariffs.

MACRO OUTLOOK: MNI US Macro Weekly: Jury’s Still Out On Q2 Downturn

May-30 20:51

We've just published our US Macro Weekly - Download Full Report Here
 

While the past week may be remembered for court decisions suspending the majority of the White House’s tariffs, it also brought further data evidence that the US economy did not fall off a cliff at the start of Q2.

  • Consumer surveys (UMichigan, Conference Board) showed a downtick in consumer inflation expectations and improved sentiment, reflecting the US-China trade de-escalation on May 12.
  • And while updated GDP data showed downwardly revised Q1 domestic demand, April personal consumption slowed but remained positive as underlying income growth remained solid.
  • Likewise, though core durable goods orders retreated from Q1, a clear dropoff at the start of Q2 was not in full evidence. Regional Fed surveys signaled that activity stabilized in April-May, albeit at relatively weak levels, and labor market data pointed to incremental rather than sharp weakness.
  • The point was underlined by the Atlanta Fed's nowcast for Q2 GDP growth which jumped to 3.84% on Friday from 2.18% in its May 27 update. Even if dramatic upgrade was due to a lower trade deficit in April as tariff front-running reversed, final domestic demand is still expected to be robust overall.
  • Of course, things can change quickly: note Friday’s apparent re-escalation in US-China trade tensions and the temporary nature of the judicial tariff freeze (which in any case looks to be circumvented by the Trump administration), as well as the July “reciprocal” tariff negotiation deadline continuing to loom large.
  • For the moment though, while uncertainty looks to be a constant, the data aren’t (yet) showing the degree of deterioration that had until recently been feared.
  • Next week’s data highlights include key checkpoints for May, including ISM Manufacturing and Services surveys (which look likely to show some recovery versus April) and the US Employment report.
  • Nonfarm payrolls growth is expected to moderate in May after a surprisingly robust 177k in April, with consensus currently around the 130k mark. The unemployment rate meanwhile is seen holding at 4.2% for what would be a third consecutive month.

 

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