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Just been watching the AUD/USD action lately and there's definitely some interesting dynamics at play here. The Australian dollar has been under pressure against the greenback, mainly because China's economic data has been looking soft. The services PMI came in at 52.0 in December, which was actually a dip from November, and that matters a lot for Australia given how tight the trade ties are between the two countries. Manufacturing PMI did bounce back to 50.1, so there's at least some mixed signals from China's economy.
On the Australian side, what's catching my eye is the inflation story. Headline inflation hit 3.8% back in October and it's still sitting above the RBA's 2-3% target range. The central bank has been pretty clear that if inflation doesn't cool down as expected, they're ready to tighten policy. A lot of traders are now pricing in a potential rate hike for early 2026, which could eventually support the AUD. The big catalyst was supposed to be that Q4 CPI report in late January - if it came in hotter than expected, that could've triggered a rate hike at the RBA's February meeting.
Meanwhile, the US dollar has been on a tear thanks to geopolitical risk appetite and safe-haven flows. The dollar index was trading near 98.60 when I last checked, and there's been a lot of noise around US-Venezuela tensions that's been keeping risk sentiment cautious. The Fed is still expected to cut rates further through 2026, but the market's digesting what that actually means for the greenback's strength.
Looking at the technicals on AUD/USD, the pair was hovering around 0.6680 - right near the lower edge of an upward channel. The RSI was sitting at 59.60, so there's still room before overbought. If we get a clean break above the 9-day EMA at 0.6681, we could see a test of 0.6700 and then 0.6727, which was the high back in late December. On the flip side, if support cracks below 0.6680, we could be looking at a drop toward the 0.6414 level from August. The pair's really at a crossroads right now - a lot depends on whether the RBA actually moves on rates and how the Fed continues to evolve its policy path.