Abstract:Outperforming US retail data and cooling Australian inflation expectations widen the policy divergence between the Fed and RBA, sending AUD/USD lower. Technical markers suggest a potential test of 0.6590 if support at 0.6660 fails.

The Australian Dollar has come under renewed selling pressure, slipping below the 0.6700 handle against the Greenback as a widening macroeconomic chasm between the US and Australia forces traders to reprice interest rate expectations.
Data released on Thursday highlights the contrasting trajectories of the two economies. In Australia, the Melbourne Institute reported a dip in consumer inflation expectations for January to 4.6% (down from 4.7%).
While this indicates a gentle cooling of price pressures, it complicates the Reserve Bank of Australias (RBA) narrative. With domestic CPI still sitting above the target band at 3.4%, the RBA remains in a delicate “wait-and-see” mode, holding rates at 3.6%.
Conversely, the US economy continues to defy slowdown predictions. November retail sales surged 0.6%, beating the 0.4% forecast, while jobless claims fell unexpectedly to 198,000, signaling a labor market that remains tight despite restrictive policy.
This resilience has pushed market expectations for a Federal Reserve pivot further into the second half of the year, with Morgan Stanley now delaying cut forecasts to the June-September window.
The AUD/USD pair is currently testing critical structural support.
While the RBA is pricing in a 35-40% chance of a hike in February, the “higher-for-longer” reality in the US is the dominant driver for the pair. Unless the upcoming Australian Q4 CPI data delivers a significant extensive shock, the path of least resistance for the Aussie appears lower, subject to commodity price stability.