AUD/USD sticks to recovery gains, around 0.6620-25 area on upbeat Australian Retail Sales
|- AUD/USD rebounds swiftly from a multi-month low, albeit the upside potential seems limited.
- A positive risk tone keeps the USD bulls on the defensive and benefits the risk-sensitive Aussie.
- The upbeat Australian Retail Sales data fails to impress bulls or provide any meaningful impetus.
The AUD/USD pair stages a goodish recovery from sub-0.6600 levels, or a three-and-half-week low touched during the Asian session on Thursday and recovers a part of the previous day's heavy losses. Spot prices currently trade around the 0.6620-0.6625 area, up nearly 0.35% for the day, and move little following the release of Australian Retail Sales data.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported that the total value of sales at the retail level rose by 0.7% in May as compared to a modest 0.1% increase anticipated and a flat reading in the previous month. The upbeat data, however, fails to provide any meaningful impetus to the Aussie as traders seem convinced that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will refrain from hiking interest rates in July. The expectations were lifted by domestic data released on Wednesday, which showed that consumer inflation slowed to a 13-month low in May. This, along with worries about deteriorating US-China relations, acts as a headwind for the AUD/USD pair, though subdued US Dollar (USD) price action could act as a tailwind, at least for the time being.
A generally positive tone around the equity markets is seen as a key factor undermining the safe-haven Greenback and lending some support to the risk-sensitive Australian Dollar (AUD). That said, any meaningful USD corrective decline from a two-week high touched on Wednesday seems elusive in the wake of a more hawkish stance adopted by the Federal Reserve (Fed). It is worth recalling that the US central bank earlier this month signalled that borrowing costs may still need to rise as much as 50 bps by the end of this year. Furthermore, Fed Chair Jerome Powell, speaking at the ECB conference on Wednesday, reiterated that two rate increases are likely this year and said that he does not see inflation coming down to the Fed's 2% target until 2025.
The aforementioned fundamental backdrop suggests that the path of least resistance for the AUD/USD pair is to the downside and warrants some caution before positioning for any further intraday appreciating move. Hence, it will be prudent to wait for strong follow-through buying before confirming that spot prices have formed a near-term bottom and confirming that the recent rejection slide from the 0.6900 mark, or a multi-month peak, has run its course. Traders now look to the US economic docket, featuring the final Q1 GDP print, Initial Jobless Claims and Pending Home Sales, for some impetus later during the North American session.
Technical levels to watch
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