AUD/USD retreats from intraday high, fading the initial reaction to the mixed Aussie data amid risk-off mood amid early Monday. In doing so, the risk-barometer pair prints a three-day downtrend as sellers attack the 0.6900 round figure after refreshing the two-week low.
Earlier in the day, Australia’s fourth quarter (Q4) Retail Sales dropped 0.2% QoQ versus -0.6% expected and prior increase of 0.2%. Additionally, TD Securities Inflation for the nation rose to 0.9% MoM from 0.2% prior, as well as to 6.4% YoY versus 5.9% previous readouts, during January.
Talking about the risk, the weekend headlines suggesting the US military fighter jet shot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina weighed on the sentiment as US Secretary of State Antony Blinked called off his previously planned visit to Beijing following the event. In a reaction to the event, China President Xi Jinping termed this as an ‘obvious overreaction’.
Elsewhere, the dovish Fed actions couldn’t keep the US Dollar bears hopeful following the strong US jobs report and activity data. That said, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) surprised markets by revealing that the Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) rose by 517K in January, versus 185K expected and 260K (upwardly revised) prior. It’s worth noting that the Unemployment Rate also dropped to 3.4% from 3.5% prior and 3.6% expected but the Average Hourly Earnings eased during the stated month. Furthermore, the rebound in the US ISM Services PMI from 49.2 to 55.2, versus 50.4 expected, also underpinned the rebound in the United States Treasury bond yields and the US Dollar.
That said, S&P 500 Futures extend the previous day’s pullback from the highest levels since August, down 0.30% intraday near 4,140 by the press time. On the same line, the US 10-year Treasury bond yields remain firmer for the third consecutive day, to 3.56% by the press time, following the biggest weekly jump since late September 2022.
Looking forward, headlines surrounding China and the concerns over the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) next move could entertain AUD/USD pair traders ahead of Tuesday’s speech from Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powel. Following that, Friday’s US UoM Consumer Sentiment Index for February, as well as the University of Michigan's 5-year Consumer Inflation expectations, will be important for the pair traders to watch.
It should be noted that the market concerns favor a hawkish move from the RBA amid upbeat inflation data but a less than 0.25% rate hike could quickly drag the AUD/USD pair.
A sustained downside break of a three-month-old ascending trend line, around 0.6930 by the press time, directs AUD/USD further toward the south.