Chart Of The Day: 3 Reasons The Australian Dollar Is Set To Extend Its Selloff

 | Jul 12, 2021 15:41

There appears to be a perfect storm of events setting up to pressure the Australian dolllar lower.

After the US Federal Reserve surprised markets in mid-June by let it be known that it expects record low rates until the end of 2024. Of course, investors buy assets in currencies that pay higher interest rates, while tending to short those with lower rates.

On top of that, Australia's ongoing trade dispute with China, its biggest two-way trading partner, which began in 2020, cost the Land Down Under about "about $3 billion in commodities sales last year," according to Bloomberg. The cold war between the two countries has yet to be resolved.

Finally, Australia’s slow vaccination rate has allowed COVID-19 to run rampant yet again. The country's largest city, Sydney, is again in lockdown.

As such, the Aussie has three catalysts working against it: an extended period of interest differentials, ongoing diplomatic fallout with China and the re-escalation of the pandemic. Just one of these themes would be enough to hurt the Australian dollar. All three make additional declines of the currency all but certain.

Here's what that looks like on the technical chart: