In the last 48 hours the Australian dollar has made repeated attempts to move up strongly to the resistance level at 0.7850 however it has been rejected every time and sent back easing lower. After finally springing to life in the middle of last week, the Australian dollar dropped sharply to close out the week and fall back down below 0.7800 again to more familiar territory below the resistance level at 0.7850. During last week the Australian dollar moved through the resistance at 0.7850 to reach a new four week high around 0.7900. For the last month the Australian dollar has steadied well and traded in a narrow range between support at 0.77 and 0.78, although a couple of weeks ago it rallied higher to a two week high near 0.7850. To start last week it slowly eased back a little from resistance at 0.7850 however it is finally made its way through there. It has enjoyed receiving solid support from the 0.77 level throughout this time and will be looking to receive further support in the coming days. A few weeks ago it rallied a little higher again back towards 0.78 however it then eased back to receive more support from 0.77. Several weeks ago the Australian dollar was on a roller-coaster ride dropping sharply to a new multi-year low below 0.7630 before rallying strongly and moving back up above the 0.77 level and more recently 0.78.
In the second half of January, the Australian dollar fell very sharply and break lower from the trading range that had been established roughly between 0.8050 and 0.8200. Back in mid-January it made numerous attempts at the resistance level at 0.82 only to be sent back often before finally finishing that week moving through this key level. In doing so it was able to reach a one month high near 0.83 before being sold back down again towards 0.82 as the resistance and selling activity above this level kicked in. Over the Christmas / New Year period, the Australian dollar seemed to have been content with trading in a narrow range below the resistance at 0.82, which continues to remain a key level as it is presently provides resistance. The Australian dollar experienced a disappointing November and December moving from resistance around 0.88 down to the new lows recently. For a couple of months from September through to November, the Australian dollar did well to stop the bleeding and trade within a range between 0.8650 and 0.88 after experiencing a sharp decline throughout September which saw it move from close to 0.94 down to below 0.8650.
Back at the beginning of September the Australian dollar showed some positive signs as it surged higher again bouncing off support below 0.93 and reaching a new four week high around 0.94 however that all now seems a distant memory. It seems a long way away now but the Australian dollar reached a three week high just shy of 0.9480 at the end of July after it enjoyed a solid period which saw it surge higher through the resistance level at 0.9425 to the three week around 0.9480, before easing back towards that level. The Australian dollar enjoyed a solid surge higher reaching a new eight month high above 0.95 at the end of June, only to return most of its gains in very quick time to finish out that week. Since the middle of June the Australian dollar has made repeated attempts to break through the resistance level around 0.9425, however despite its best efforts it was rejected every time as the key level continued to stand tall, even though it has allowed the small excursion to above 0.95.
Australia’s economy continued to show sluggish growth in the fourth quarter, adding to the case for further stimulus in the coming months. The economy expanded 2.5 percent in the fourth quarter from the year-ago period, government data showed on Wednesday, in line with expectations and after growing 2.7 percent in the third quarter. Quarter on quarter, the economy logged growth of 0.5 percent, also matching estimates and following the 0.3 percent expansion in the third quarter. Markets showed little reaction on the news: the benchmark S&P ASX 200 index was down 0.3 percent, no change from before the data release, while the Australian dollar rose briefly to $0.7829 before falling back. The figures came a day after the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) decided to refrain from further monetary stimulus, after it cut rates by 25 basis points last month to a historic low of 2.25 percent. “The bias is certainly to further easing, with the economy growing below-trend and unemployment rates rising, and that gives them plenty of ammunition to cut rates once more by May, taking cash rates to 2 percent,” said Matthew Circosta, economist at Moody’s Analytics.
(Daily chart / 4 hourly chart below)
AUD/USD March 4 at 21:55 GMT 0.7820 H: 0.7860 L: 0.7795
AUD/USD Technical
During the early hours of the Asian trading session on Thursday, the AUD/USD is easing a little lower back towards 0.7800 after rallying up strongly in the last 24 hours back to the resistance level at 0.7850. Current range: trading right above 0.7800 around 0.7820.
Further levels in both directions:
- Below: 0.7700.
- Above: 0.7850, 0.8200, and 0.8650.
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