AUD Under Pressure: Why Rate Hike Hopes Can't Stop the Slide Against USD

The Australian Dollar has hit a rough patch, sliding for six consecutive trading days despite growing expectations that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) might start raising rates as early as February. Traders are left scratching their heads—shouldn’t higher interest rates attract more demand for AUD? Welcome to the paradox of today’s forex market.

The RBA Rate Hike Story Isn’t Enough

Here’s the puzzle: Australia’s Consumer Inflation Expectations climbed to 4.7% in December, up from November’s 4.5% low. This should be bullish for the Australian Dollar. Both Commonwealth Bank of Australia and National Australia Bank are now pricing in an earlier tightening cycle, with swaps suggesting a 28% probability of a February hike and nearly 41% odds for March.

Yet the AUD/USD pair keeps bleeding lower, currently trading below the 0.6600 support zone. The reason? Everything else is drowning out the RBA’s hawkish signal.

The USD’s Quiet Strength

The US Dollar Index (DXY) is sitting comfortably around 98.40, underpinned by a critical shift in market expectations. Federal Reserve rate cuts are off the table for now. Last month’s jobs report painted a mixed picture—64K payrolls came in slightly ahead, but October’s revision was brutal. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.6%, the highest since 2021, signaling labor market softening.

Fed officials remain divided. The median projection pencils in just one rate cut for 2026, while some policymakers see zero. Yet traders are pricing two cuts. That confusion is keeping USD bid, as investors prefer to sit tight rather than chase fading rate-cut dreams.

Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic crystallized the dilemma: the jobs report “didn’t change the outlook,” and he warned against hasty declarations of victory on price pressures. With input costs rising and firms determined to preserve margins through higher prices, the Fed has reason to stay patient.

Technical Setup Suggests Deeper Losses

On the daily chart, AUD/USD has broken below its ascending channel trend, a sign that bulls are losing grip. The pair is also trading beneath the nine-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) at 0.6619, indicating weakening short-term momentum.

If selling pressure intensifies, the 0.6500 psychological level beckons, followed by August’s six-month low of 0.6414. Conversely, a recovery would need to reclaim the nine-day EMA and test the three-month high of 0.6685, then 0.6707 (the highest since October 2024).

China’s Slowdown Adds to the Drag

Australia’s economic picture isn’t helping matters either. China’s November retail sales rose just 1.3% year-over-year, well short of the 2.9% forecast. Industrial production clocked 4.8%, missing the 5.0% expected. Fixed asset investment fell 2.6% year-to-date, a miss on the -2.3% forecast.

For a resource exporter like Australia, weaker Chinese demand signals trouble ahead. Meanwhile, Australia’s own manufacturing PMI edged up to 52.2, but services PMI slipped to 51.0. Employment fell 21.3K in November, a sharp reversal from October’s upward revision.

Where Does This Leave You?

The irony: pound sterling to Australian dollar traders aren’t the only ones wrestling with mixed signals. Across currency pairs, macro uncertainty is king. The RBA may raise rates, but the Fed’s staying put—and that’s enough to keep USD bid and AUD under water. From a technical standpoint, the downside pressure remains intact until the pair reclaims meaningful support above 0.6600.

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