The Australian dollar is showing distinct price action setups across its major crosses, with AUD/USD reacting to Fed turmoil, AUD/NZD pressured by RBA cut bets, and AUD/JPY pivoting near key support. With Australia’s quarterly CPI due next week and global central bank narratives shifting, traders should be on alert for breakout or reversal opportunities across AUD pairs.
AUD/USD Climbs as RBA Holds for CPI and Powell Faces Resignation Pressure
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AUD/USD Technical Analysis: Australian Dollar vs US Dollar
The Australian dollar rose for a third straight day on Wednesday, with AUD/USD closing above Thursday’s open—the session when weak employment data revived RBA rate cut bets. However, as yesterday’s move was largely driven by a weaker US dollar during thin liquidity conditions, I suspect the upside for AUD/USD could be limited.
AUD/USD also struggled to retest 66c before momentum turned. And if the US dollar avoids breaking to new cycle lows in the near term, bears may look to fade into the current rally—at least over the short run.
AUD/JPY Technical Analysis: Australian Dollar vs Japanese Yen
AUD/NZD Technical Analysis: Bearish Reversal Risks for the Australian Dollar
The weekly chart for AUD/NZD suggests a 5-wave Elliott pattern is unfolding from the November high. A completed ABC correction implies wave 4 may have already peaked, especially as the weekly RSI (2) recently hit its most overbought reading since July—before faltering below the 1.10 handle and forming a bearish candle last week.
A measured projection of waves 1 through 3 from the wave 4 high points to potential support near the April low at 1.0652, aligning closely with the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement. This also places the possible wave 5 termination near the same level.
Near term, bears could look to fade rallies towards last week’s high, targeting a move towards 1.08. A deeper decline could develop if the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) signals a dovish shift—especially with the Australian dollar facing renewed macro pressure against the New Zealand dollar.


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