The Australian Dollar Is Back At 77 Cents After The US Dollar Collapsed

 | Mar 16, 2017 10:38

Originally published by AxiTrader h2 Key Takeaway/h2

The Fed's decision to raise rates was read as a dovish hike by the market as the statement, dot plot, and Janet Yellen's press conference oozed stability and the measured pace of rate hikes in the US.

That the market reacted this way when the Fed signalled two more hikes in 2017 and then 3 in 2018 is intriguing. But it shows that after the strong language from Fed speakers before the blackout this month had many - me included - expecting a stronger message from the Fed.

As a result of dovish read and US dollar's fall the Australian dollar rallied back above 77 cents as it fed on the double whammy of a weaker dollar and the associated strength in and surge of commodity prices.

h2 What You Need To Know/h2

77 cents again.

That's where Aussie dollar bulls have driven prices this morning in the wake of the dovish read the market has taken on the FOMC decision to hike rates and the path it has set out for interest rates over the coming 2 years.

That AUD/USD strength is a natural result of the confluence of a number of positive drivers for the Aussie.

The stock surge screams a lift in investor confidence and risk appetite. Tick.

The rally in US bonds compressed the Aussie/US 2 year bond spread. Tick.

The weakness in the US dollar lifted all boats. Double tick.

I say double tick because not only does a weaker US dollar naturally strengthen the Aussie dollar but the weaker US dollar when it feeds into a surge in commodity prices then feeds back into the Australian dollar via the linkage where traders see the Aussie as a commodity currency.

But that in the blender, mix it up and the fair value level it would suggest for the AUD/USD is naturally lifted.