|

AUD/USD bulls capped at 0.7650, too much too soon?

Currently, AUD/USD is trading at 0.7632, up 0.19% on the day, having posted a daily high at 0.7656 and low at 0.7587.

AUD/USD rallied from below the 0.76 handle up to current aforementioned highs, supported by a risk-on recovery on Wall Street and higher metal prices.In particular,  Iron ore recovered after the sharp slide seen recently. Overnight, RBA's Debelle did not give any further clues into the Central Banks policy outlooks but there is mounting pressure on the Aussie due to conflicting views among local economists into the rate outlook. 

Gold finally gives in to the risk-on environment, breaking key ascending support line

Meanwhile, the dollar is also performing on the positive side, slowing down the pace of the Aussie's advances. There has been a number of supporting factors for the higher greenback with a surge in consumer confidence. The Consumer Board Consumer Confidence Index rallied to125.6 smashing expectations of a114 print. At the same time, markets received further hawkish comments from Federal Reserve officials. Chicago's Fed President Charles Evans and Dallas' Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan both advocated for further rate hikes this year. 

 AUD/USD levels

Valeria Bednarik, chief analyst at FXStreet explained that the short-term picture presents a modest upward potential:

"In the 1 hour chart, the price is above a now bullish 20 SMA, whilst technical indicators are turning lower in positive territory, not enough to suggest further short-term declines."

Valeria's 4hr analyses is showing limited upward potential:

"In the 4 hours chart, the price settled above a bearish 20 SMA, whilst technical indicator entered positive territory, but turned flat, indicating that buying interest diminished after the latest intraday bounce. Overall, the upward potential seems limited as long as the price remains below the 0.7670 region, although a recovery above it could see the pair extending its recovery up to 0.7749, March 21st daily high."

Author

Ross J Burland

Ross J Burland, born in England, UK, is a sportsman at heart. He played Rugby and Judo for his county, Kent and the South East of England Rugby team.

More from Ross J Burland
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD trims losses, back to 1.1830

EUR/USD manages to regain some composure, leaving behind part of the earlier losses and reclaim the 1.1830 region on Tuesday. In the meantime, the US Dollar’s upside impulse loses some momentum while investors remain cautious ahead of upcoming US data releases, including the FOMC Minutes.

GBP/USD bounces off lows, retargets 1.3550

After bottoming out just below the 1.3500 yardstick, GBP/USD now gathers some fresh bids and advances to the 1.3530-1.3540 band in the latter part of Tuesday’s session. Cable’s recovery comes as the Greenback surrenders part of its advance, although it keeps the bullish bias well in place for the day.

Gold remains offered below $5,000

Gold stays on the defensive on Tuesday, receding to the sub-$5,000 region per troy ounce on the back of the persistent move higher in the Greenback. The precious metal’s decline is also underpinned by the modest uptick in US Treasury yields across the spectrum.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP upside looks limited amid deteriorating retail demand

The cryptocurrency market extends weakness with major coins including Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH) and Ripple (XRP) trading in sideways price action at the time of writing on Tuesday.

UK jobs market weakens, bolstering rate cut hopes

In the UK, the latest jobs report made for difficult reading. Nonetheless, this represents yet another reminder for the Bank of England that they need to act swiftly given the collapse in inflation expected over the coming months. 

Ripple slides to $1.45 as downside risks surge

Ripple edges lower at the time of writing on Tuesday, from the daily open of $1.48, as headwinds persist across the crypto market. A short-term support is emerging at $1.45, but a buildup of bearish positions could further weaken the derivatives market and prolong the correction.