AUD: Asia Wrap - AUD/USD Trades Sideways Above 0.6500, AUD/JPY Breaking ?

Jul-09 04:31

The AUD/USD has had a range of 0.6510 - 0.6537 in the Asia- Pac session, it is currently trading around 0.6530, -0.03%. The pair has traded sideways in a tight range today as it consolidates the reaction to the RBA yesterday. The AUD needs to hold above its 0.6480/0.6500 support as a sustained move below there would see a deeper correction back to 0.6350/0.6400.

  • MNI RBA Review - July 2025: Easing Bias Still Intact: The RBA surprised the market by keeping rates on hold at 3.85%. The central bank wants to see more evidence of inflation sustainably trending towards the 2-3% target before easing more.
  • RBA Governor Bullock stated the central bank still has an easing bias, and the split vote decision (6 in favor of the hold, 3 in favor or a cut) reflected the timing of further easing rather than the direction of rates.
  • AUSSIE BONDS ACGB Dec-35 Supply Digested But Less Demand: Expectations of sustained strong pricing at auctions proved accurate, with the latest round of ACGB Dec-35 supply seeing the weighted average yield print 0.58bp through prevailing mids (per Yieldbroker). Today's cover ratio fell to 2.6500x from 3.1042x.
  • The AUD/USD bounced strongly off its support around 0.6500 overnight, looks like it's back to the 0.6500 - 0.6600 range and it should now take its cues from the USD. Watching to see if the support continues to hold as a move through there signals a deeper correction.
  • Options : Closest significant option expiries for NY cut, based on DTCC data: 0.6425(AUD700m), 0.6550(AUD 607m). Upcoming Close Strikes : 0.6650(AUD857m July 10), 0.6600(AUD634m July 10), 0.6650(AUD599m July 11)
  • CFTC Data shows Asset managers pared back their shorts slightly -35992, the Leveraged community maintained their shorts -22903..
  • AUD/JPY - Today's range 95.62 - 96.05, it is trading currently around 96.04, +0.34%. The pair is attempting to break above 96.00, with the market positioned both short AUD and long JPY. A sustained break above this level could see another tranche of these shorts pared back and provide a tailwind to probe higher.

Fig 1: AUD/JPY spot Daily Chart

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

Historical bullets

THAILAND: VIEW: JP Morgan Sees 2025 CPI Below BoT Target Driving 75bp More Cuts

Jun-09 04:24

May Thai inflation was stronger than expected with headline down 0.6% y/y but still a deterioration from April’s -0.2% y/y, while core rose 1.1% y/y up from 1.0% due to prepared food and housing. JP Morgan expects deflation to continue in Thailand through Q3 2025 resulting in only 0.2% inflation in 2025 below the Bank of Thailand’s 1-3% target corridor. Thus it continues to “pencil in three more 25bp rate cuts” in June, August and October bringing the terminal rate to 1.0%.

  • JP Morgan notes that “on a sequential basis, headline and core CPI rose 0.3%m/m, sa and 0.2%m/m, sa respectively, while the underlying trend continued to downshift.”
  • “The stronger-than-expected print was largely driven by higher core (0.3%pt. contribution to the monthly increase of 0.26%m/m, sa;) and energy prices (0.03%pt.) with a partial offset from raw food prices (-0.07%pt.). Within core CPI, prepared food (0.14%pt.) and housing (0.08%pt.) prices posted sharp gains.”
  • “The outsized increase in prepared food prices last month (0.14%pt. vs. 2018-24 average: 0.03%pt.) was driven primarily by the fast food/delivery sub-component. We are inclined to think that it reflects ad-hoc/seasonal re-pricing by service providers at this point, given the lack of input cost pressures (e.g., labor, fuel, raw food).”
  • “Indeed, supply-demand dynamics in the agricultural sector have improved significantly this year, leading to downward pressures on both wholesale and retail raw food prices.”
  • “Stripping out prepared food, our so-called core-core CPI gauge fell into deflation territory and continues to show weak demand-pull price pressures.”
  • “The outlook for energy CPI remains benign on low and stable global crude oil prices.”

ASIA STOCKS: Major Asia Pac Markets Firmer, Kospi Continues To Outperform

Jun-09 04:20

Asian equity markets are mostly trading with a positive footing in the first part of Monday trade. The Nikkei 225 is up around 1%, likewise for the Hang Seng in Hong Kong. The Kospi continues to be an outperformer, up over 1.6%. 

  • We had a positive lead from US markets on Friday, the SPX up a little over 1%. US data beats, particularly on the wages may have helped. Also, today in London we have US-China trade talks resuming. Positive themes around exports of rare earths resuming to the US and the EU is another positive ahead of these talks.
  • Fallout from protests in major US cities (with Trump calling in the National Guard for Los Angeles) is not impacting US equity sentiment greatly at this stage.
  • Still, China's CSI 300 is up only modestly, last +0.18% at the lunchtime break, putting the index near 3881. Earlier China data showed CPI remain in deflation, while PPI deflation worsened further. This underscores on-going policy support needs in 2025. On the trade front, export and imports where both below forecasts, with trade to the US continuing to fall.
  • The HSI is up +1% at the break, with the tech sub index up +2.3% at this stage.
  • The Kospi continues to outperform, up over 1.6%. This puts the index within striking distance of July 2024 highs around 2900. Offshore investors have bought $348mn of local shares today. Optimism around the domestic outlook continue to buoy sentiment.
  • In South East Asia, gains are more modest, mostly under 0.50%. Australian and Indonesian markets are closed today. 

US TSYS: Tsys Firmer, Led By Front End, 2yr Struggles Near 4.05% Again

Jun-09 04:01

The first part of Monday US Tsy trade has seen outperformance, led by the front end. For the 2-5yr tenor yields are off around 3bps. The 10yr Tsy yield is back under 4.49%. 

  • The 10yr Sep Tsy future has crept higher throughout the session, last at 110-02+, +05+, versus end Friday levels. A direct catalyst for the move haven't been obvious, although we have only given back a modest part of Friday's sell-off.
  • For the 2yr Tsy yield, we have struggled once we approach the 4.05% region, going back to mid March. Despite Friday's data beats in the US, there still may be a sense of more downside risks to growth lie ahead, which in turn could be capping upside yield momentum.
  • The 10yr, just under 4.49%, remains fairly close to the mid-point of recent ranges.
  • Looking ahead, we have wholesale inventories tonight, then tomorrow NFIP small business sentiment and NY Fed inflation expectations. The main focus will be on Wednesday's CPI print though.