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AUD/USD: Aussie Jumps, RBA Rate Cut Bets Pared on Another Monster Jobs Report
FOREX.com
2024-10-17
Australia recorded another monster increase in employment for September, putting another nail in the coffin for Reserve Bank of Australia rate cuts this year. However, like the New Zealand CPI report on Wednesday, its impact on AUD/USD is likely to be short-lived with the US interest rate outlook likely to remain the dominant influence in the near-term.

Overview

Australia recorded another monster increase in employment for September, putting another nail in the coffin for Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate cut expectations this year. However, like the New Zealand CPI report on Wednesday, its impact on AUD/USD is likely to be short-lived with the US interest rate outlook likely to remain the dominant influence in the near-term.

The details: Wow!

You’ll struggle to find a jobs report as strong as Australia produced for September. It was near-faultless.
AUD/USD: Aussie Jumps, RBA Rate Cut Bets Pared on Another Monster Jobs Report_1
Employment surged by 64,100 with 51,600 of those full-time positions. Hours worked inched higher by 0.2%. Unemployment held steady at a downwardly revised 4.1%, a result made more impressive by participation rising to 67.2%, a record high. The employment to population ratio also hit fresh highs.
Underemployment, which measures the proportion of the workforce who are employed but would like more hours, tumbled 0.2% percentage points to 6.3%, the equal-lowest level since April 2023. Combined with unemployed workers, the underutilisation ratio eased to a six-month low of 10.4%.
The decline in these two measures of labour slack suggests the jobs market may be tightening again, potentially placing renewed upward pressure on wages and with it domestic inflationary pressures.
With Australian underlying inflation pressures remaining well above the 2.5% midpoint of the RBA’s target range, the strength of the September update will create unease among policymakers about cutting interest rates prematurely, adding to risks that inflationary pressures may reaccelerate given the likely boost to demand.
AUD/USD: Aussie Jumps, RBA Rate Cut Bets Pared on Another Monster Jobs Report_2

RBA rate cut pricing slashed

Rates traders have slashed expectations about the speed and magnitude of RBA rate cuts expected for the upcoming easing cycle with overnight index swaps (OIS) putting the probability of a cut by December at just 26%. A cut isn’t fully priced until April 2025 with only three reductions expected by the end of 2025.
AUD/USD: Aussie Jumps, RBA Rate Cut Bets Pared on Another Monster Jobs Report_3
The way things are going, unless we see a meaningful deceleration in underlying inflationary pressures in the months ahead, or some form of major global risk event, the RBA simply has no need to provide more stimulus to the economy.
The strength of the labour market likely means the RBA will need more than one quarterly CPI report to feel confident that inflation return will return to target by the start of 2026, meaning a cut is unlikely until after the Q4 2024 report is received in late January.
AUD/USD bumping up against former supportAUD/USD: Aussie Jumps, RBA Rate Cut Bets Pared on Another Monster Jobs Report_4
AUD/USD jumped following the employment report, testing former horizontal support at .6700. With RSI (14) breaking its downtrend, there’s tentative evidence to suggest bearish momentum may be turning, although the signal has yet to be confirmed by MACD.
If the price manages to break and hold above .6700, traders could buy with a stop beneath the level for protection targeting a move to the 50-day moving average or .6760 where rallies stalled over the past fortnight. There are no major levels beyond until the downtrend located around .6830.
Alternatively, if the price can’t break .6700, the trade can be flipped with shorts initiated beneath the level with a stop above for protection. .6660 would be the obvious initial target.
I expect the influence of the report will tail quickly over the remainder of Thursday’s session, replaced by the reaction in the USD to US jobless claims and retail sales data and ECB interest rate decision.