Australian Dollar Price Forecast: The siege of 0.7000
- AUD/USD keeps the downward trend in place and challenges 0.7000.
- The US Dollar remains bid, supported by Fed hike bets and geopolitics.
- Advanced Manufacturing and Services PMIs are the main focus in Oz.
The Aussie Dollar is still looking for a fresh catalyst to resume its upward trend, which began in late March and appears to have lost momentum ahead of the 0.7300 hurdle in early May. Meanwhile, dynamics around the US Dollar and geopolitics seem to have been too much for the Aussie, prompting a correction in AUD/USD to the area below the key 0.7000 contention zone. In the meantime, the AUD manages to keep its constructive outlook, bolstered by still elevated inflation at home and the RBA’s cautious stance.
The Australian Dollar (AUD) builds on recent losses and sparks a somewhat consolidative move in AUD/USD near the key support zone at 0.7000. So far, spot loses ground for the fifth day in a row following June tops just ahead of 0.7100 the figure.
Meanwhile, the US Dollar (USD) remains bid as investors continue to assess the likelihood of a more cautious Federal Reserve (Fed) in the future, alongside ongoing uncertainty surrounding the recently announced US-Iran deal.
Australia's economy remains on solid footing
The Australian economy does look healthy and stable altogether and, honestly, in much better shape than many of its G10 peers.
This performance appears underpinned by a solid domestic demand and pretty decent figures when it comes to economic growth. The spectre of sticky inflation seems to justify the cautious and data-dependent stance from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), particularly following the latest meeting, where it raised rates to 4.35%, broadly in line with market expectations.
Supporting the above, the final data from the May Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) showed Manufacturing at 50.7 (from 51.3) and Services at 48.7 (from 50.7).
Adding some colour to the domestic fundamentals, the latest trade balance figures showed a A$1.791 billion surplus in April, reversing March’s A$1.024 billion deficit. The latest Gross Domestic Product (GDP) data, meanwhile, kind of disappointed expectations: the economy expanded by 0.3% QoQ in Q1 2026 (from 0.9%) and 2.5% YoY (from 2.5%), both prints missing consensus.
Still on the not-so-bright side, the labour market has cooled over the last couple of months. Indeed, the Unemployment Rate ticked higher to 4.5% in April (from 4.3%), and the Employment Change dropped by 18.6K individuals (from the revised 23.3K gain seen in the prior month).
Regarding inflation, April data saw the Consumer Price Index (CPI) come in at 4.2% from a year earlier (from 4.6%), the Trimmed Mean ticking higher to 3.4% (from 3.3%), and the Weighted Median holding steady at 3.5% over the last twelve months. The pace of disinflation remains weak, although the direction is still broadly correct. Somehow reinforcing that view, the latest Melbourne Institute’s Consumer Inflation Expectations eased to 5.5% in May (from 5.6%).
For the RBA, that means the job is still incomplete, as policymakers continue to signal that inflation may only return to target around mid-2028, keeping the focus firmly on patience rather than any imminent pivot.
Moving forward, investors expect the central bank to keep its hand steady at its August meeting, while they see around 45 basis points of tightening by year-end.
China provides stability rather than momentum
China now looks more like a stabilising force than the tailwind it usually provides to the Australian economy.
Let’s see some numbers: the economy expanded by 5.0% YoY in Q1, while Retail Sales unexpectedly contracted by 0.6% in the year to May. In addition, Industrial Production exceeded expectations last month after expanding by 4.5% from a year earlier.
Of note is the strong recovery of the trade balance, with May’s surplus widening to $105.43 billion from around $84.8 billion in the previous month and both imports and exports expanding markedly.
However, business activity seems to be regaining traction after the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported Manufacturing PMI at 50 in May (from 50.3), while Services returned to the expansion territory at 50.1 (from 49.4). At the same time, private gauges such as RatingDog still point to expansion, with Manufacturing coming in at 51.8 and Services improving to 54.4.
The disinflationary trend in China seems to have re-emerged after the CPI disappointed expectations and rose by 1.2% in the year to May, matching the previous reading. On a monthly basis, prices dropped by 0.1%, while Producer Prices gained 3.9% over the last twelve months, also holding steady from April’s prints.
In the meantime, and matching the broad consensus, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) kept its Loan Prime Rates (LPR) unchanged at 3.00% for the one-year tenor and 3.50% for the five-year tenor at its event earlier on Monday.
In summary, China is no longer pushing growth higher, but it is not dragging it down aggressively either. It is simply keeping things steady.
No pivot in sight from the RBA
As broadly awaited by market participants, the RBA left its Official Cash Rate (OCR) unchanged at 4.35% at its event early on Tuesday.
The Reserve Bank of Australia adopted a hawkish stance at its June meeting, reiterating that inflation remains too high and cautioning that more rate rises may yet be necessary if price pressures persist. Policymakers also noted continuing concerns from increased energy costs and underlined their commitment to preventing inflation from becoming entrenched.
That said, Governor Michele Bullock was a little more measured in tone at her press conference. She kept the option of additional tightening open but said the incoming data had generally progressed as expected and showed the Board did not need to tighten at this meeting. The economy is not entering a recession, and the employment market is still reasonably tight, she said.
The message in general was one of cautious tolerance. Inflation is still the bank's biggest worry, but officials seem more satisfied with the progress made so far and prepared to let past rate rises have more time to work through the economy. Further tightening is feasible, but the bar for another rate rise appears higher than the phrase alone may lead one to expect.
The Australian Dollar remains rangebound
Base case
While above its key 200-day SMA around 0.6850, the pair’s outlook is expected to remain tilted to further advances. However, such a move needs a strong catalyst to emerge, and it feels heavily dependent on the broader backdrop: without a sustained improvement in risk sentiment or continued US Dollar weakness, the probability of extra gains could start to lose momentum.
Bull case
Further conviction is needed. If risk appetite picks up serious pace, spot could extend the uptrend and initially confront the 0.7200 hurdle before reaching the 2026 peak near 0.7280, just ahead of the minor 0.7300 barrier. Further up, the 2022 ceiling at 0.7593 awaits. Speculative positioning seems to be leaning toward this scenario for now.
Bear case
In the current volatile context, we should not rule out the loss of further momentum. If sentiment deteriorates, the Greenback gains extra momentum, or Chinese data continue to disappoint, spot could recede further and revisit recent lows in the 0.6980 zone.
The recovery appears to be there, although markets are still not fully convinced.
Speculators remain broadly constructive on AUD
According to the latest Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data, speculative net longs in the Australian Dollar fell to around 18.2K contracts for the week ending on June 9, extending the recent reduction in bullish exposure. Positioning has notably deteriorated over the past month, with net longs down by nearly 67K contracts over the last four reporting weeks.
That unwinding, however, leaves speculative sentiment relatively high by historical standards. The current net long position still ranks in the 90th percentile of its 5-year range, while the speculative exposure stands at 6%, corresponding to the 89th percentile. This suggests that, although investors have been trimming bullish bets aggressively, positioning remains considerably more constructive than it has typically been over recent years.
Of note here is that the net percentile and speculative exposure percentile are telling the same story. When both are sitting around 90, there is confirmation that exposure remains historically elevated.
Upcoming events could shape the next move
In the near term, the US Dollar, global risk sentiment, and geopolitics remain the main focus. Those remain the key drivers of price action. Next on tap on the Australian docket will be the publication of the advanced Manufacturing and Services PMIs for the month of June.
Key risks include a sharper slowdown in China, a more aggressive Fed, a change in investors' risk sentiment, or any shift in the RBA’s stance. Any of these could quickly destabilise the Australian currency in the near term.
Technical analysis
In the daily chart, AUD/USD trades at 0.7002, maintaining a bearish near-term bias as it holds beneath the 55-day simple moving average (SMA) at 0.7132 and the 100-day SMA at 0.7085. The pair still trades above the 200-day SMA at 0.6854, but the slip toward the figure and an oversold-leaning Relative Strength Index (RSI) in the mid-30s suggest downside pressure remains dominant even as trend strength, indicated by the Average Directional Index (ADX) near 32, stays only moderately elevated.
On the topside, initial resistance emerges at the horizontal barrier near 0.7079, followed closely by the 100-day SMA at 0.7085 and the 55-day SMA at 0.7132, which together form a dense supply zone; beyond that, further caps appear around 0.7278/0.7283, with a stronger hurdle at 0.7661. On the downside, immediate support is seen at the 200-day SMA around 0.6854, reinforced by the horizontal level at 0.6833, while deeper floors align at 0.6660 and 0.6593, ahead of more distant supports near 0.6414 and 0.6373.
(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)
A positive backdrop with lingering doubts
The broader backdrop for the Australian Dollar remains constructive, and the RBA’s stance should continue to provide a degree of support on dips.
But the Australian Dollar is still a currency that trades heavily on sentiment. When confidence is strong, the Aussie performs well. When uncertainty creeps in, the Greenback tends to take over.
So while the medium-term story still leans constructive, the near-term outlook feels less certain. The move higher is there, but conviction is not quite there…yet.
Interest rates FAQs
Interest rates are charged by financial institutions on loans to borrowers and are paid as interest to savers and depositors. They are influenced by base lending rates, which are set by central banks in response to changes in the economy. Central banks normally have a mandate to ensure price stability, which in most cases means targeting a core inflation rate of around 2%. If inflation falls below target the central bank may cut base lending rates, with a view to stimulating lending and boosting the economy. If inflation rises substantially above 2% it normally results in the central bank raising base lending rates in an attempt to lower inflation.
Higher interest rates generally help strengthen a country’s currency as they make it a more attractive place for global investors to park their money.
Higher interest rates overall weigh on the price of Gold because they increase the opportunity cost of holding Gold instead of investing in an interest-bearing asset or placing cash in the bank. If interest rates are high that usually pushes up the price of the US Dollar (USD), and since Gold is priced in Dollars, this has the effect of lowering the price of Gold.
The Fed funds rate is the overnight rate at which US banks lend to each other. It is the oft-quoted headline rate set by the Federal Reserve at its FOMC meetings. It is set as a range, for example 4.75%-5.00%, though the upper limit (in that case 5.00%) is the quoted figure. Market expectations for future Fed funds rate are tracked by the CME FedWatch tool, which shapes how many financial markets behave in anticipation of future Federal Reserve monetary policy decisions.
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Author

Pablo Piovano
FXStreet
Born and bred in Argentina, Pablo has been carrying on with his passion for FX markets and trading since his first college years.


















