KirkBarton

AUD/USD: the instrument is testing 0.7500 for the breakout

OANDA:AUDUSD   Australian Dollar / U.S. Dollar
Current trend

During the Asian session, the AUD/USD pair is actively growing, re-testing the level of 0.7500 for the breakout. The instrument is developing a "bullish" momentum formed at the end of the last week. However, the general dynamics of the short-term outlook remain flat for now.

A strong report on the US labor market, published on Friday, did not allow quotations to consolidate on new local highs. However, the data from Australia were also positive. Thus, the AiG manufacturing activity index rose from 53.2 to 55.7 points for March, which outpaced the average market forecasts, while the Australian Commonwealth Bank manufacturing PMI index rose from 57.3 to 57.7 points over the same period against neutral expectations of investors. The National Reserve Bank Commodity Price Index accelerated from 34% to 40.9% in March, well above the expected 10% rise. At the same time, statistics on the credit market disappointed traders: for February, the volume of mortgage loans issued decreased by 4.7% after increasing by 1% last month, although preliminary market estimates suggested an increase of 1%. An additional "bearish" factor for the asset is the index of the number of vacancies published today by the Australian financial group ANZ. For March, the indicator slowed down sharply from 8.4% to 0.4%, significantly worse than market forecasts of 1.6%.

Support and resistance

On the daily chart, Bollinger bands are steadily rising: the price range is actively narrowing, indicating ambiguous trading dynamics in the short term. The MACD indicator falls, keeping a poor sell signal (the histogram is below the signal line). Stochastic interrupted its confident fall and reversed into a horizontal plane approximately in the center of its working area.

Resistance levels: 0.7550, 0.7600, 0.7650, 0.7700.

Support levels: 0.7500, 0.7440, 0.7366, 0.7300.
Disclaimer

The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.