Australian Dollar Faces Pressure as Rate Cut Expectations Fade Globally

RBA’s cautious stance meets stronger-than-expected wage growth data

Australia’s currency is struggling to find footing on Wednesday following the release of the Wage Price Index for the third quarter. The Australian Dollar continues to face headwinds despite mixed domestic signals, with investors reassessing rate cut probabilities both at home and abroad. Meanwhile, the 50 yen to aud comparison highlights broader currency weakness, particularly against the Japanese Yen, signaling shifting risk sentiment across the market.

Wage Data Arrives as Expected, But RBA Keeps Powder Dry

The Wage Price Index painted a steady picture for Australia’s labor costs. On a quarterly basis, wages expanded by 0.8% in Q3, matching both the prior quarter’s performance and consensus forecasts. Year-over-year, wage growth remained anchored at 3.4%, consistent with previous readings and market expectations. While the data underscores a moderating inflation backdrop, the Reserve Bank of Australia has signaled it won’t rush into policy easing.

During Tuesday’s release of its November meeting minutes, RBA board members emphasized a more balanced approach to monetary policy. The central bank appears willing to maintain the cash rate at current levels if incoming economic data surprises to the upside. This measured stance is increasingly shaping market expectations—as of mid-November, interest rate futures for December 2025 trading on the ASX reflected just an 8% probability of a rate cut to 3.35%.

Employment Data Reinforces the RBA’s Patient Approach

Australia’s labor market delivered a dose of good news. The Unemployment Rate fell to 4.3% in October, beating expectations of 4.4% and retreating from 4.5% in September. Employment Change surprised to the upside, jumping to 42.2K, well ahead of the 20K forecast. These figures give the RBA further reason to sit on its hands, potentially supporting the Australian Dollar in the near term through the expectation of unchanged policy rates.

US Dollar Maintains the Upper Hand Amid Fed Uncertainty

The greenback is holding its ground as Federal Reserve rate cut bets continue to erode. The US Dollar Index, tracking the currency against six major trading partners, hovered near 99.60, drawing support from fading expectations for near-term policy cuts. The CME FedWatch Tool now prices in just a 49% probability of a 25 basis point rate cut in December—a sharp reversal from the 67% odds priced just a week prior.

Recent labor market signals from the United States paint a nuanced picture. Initial Jobless Claims came in at 232,000 for the week ended October 18, while Continuing Claims ticked up slightly to 1.957 million. An ADP employment report suggested that private-sector payroll growth has cooled, with employers averaging just 2,500 job cuts weekly over the prior four-week stretch. Federal Reserve Vice Chair Philip Jefferson reiterated the need for a cautious approach, noting that labor market risks now dominate inflation concerns.

AUD/USD Technical Breakdown Points to Further Consolidation

The Australian Dollar pair is currently trading around 0.6490, confined within a rectangular consolidation pattern. The currency remains beneath the nine-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) at 0.6514, suggesting bearish momentum remains intact.

To the downside, support materializes at the rectangle’s lower bound near 0.6470, with a deeper floor appearing at the five-month low of 0.6414 from August 21. On the flip side, the pair needs to overcome the psychological 0.6500 level and the nine-day EMA to regain upside traction. Clearing these barriers would target the rectangle’s upper boundary around 0.6630.

Weakness Across the Board

The Australian Dollar registered broad-based losses against major currency pairs during Wednesday’s session. The Australian Dollar weakened most notably against the Japanese Yen, reflecting risk-off sentiment in global markets. The comparison of 50 yen to aud underscores the currency’s vulnerability as investors reassess growth and policy divergence between the two economies.

Looking Ahead

The path forward for the Australian Dollar hinges on whether the RBA’s patient stance can withstand any further deterioration in global risk sentiment. With the Fed in a holding pattern and domestic employment data supporting the case for unchanged policy, the currency may struggle to build momentum unless technical barriers at 0.6500 are convincingly broken.

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