AUD/USD: Aussie Drops but on Course for 4th Weekly Gain – Currency Live

Currency News
australian-dollar-bank-notes- AUD

The Australian dollar is down against the US dollar on Friday.

Rekindled trade tensions between the US and China have seen investors dump the Australian dollar for a second day on fears that Australia might get caught in the middle.

The dollar gained as a haven as Wall Street opened lower while many European stock markets were closed for the Labour Day holiday.

AUD/USD was down by 68 pips (-1.04%) to 0.6443 as of 3pm GMT.

The currency pair gave up the 0.65 handle before making short work of 0.645 then finding support. Yesterday the exchange rate fell -0.69% leaving it gripping onto a +0.9% weekly gain.

Check real time GBP to EUR exchange rate

AUD: Australia plans early exit from lockdown

News on Australia’s fight against the coronavirus was positive on Friday but the Aussie dollar was undone by political developments outside its borders.

Australian Prime Minister announced his government will review the country’s virus lockdown sooner than expected. The review will now take place on May 8 instead of May 11. Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy said “We have pretty convincingly flattened the curve.”

Australia’s quicker exit from the pandemic goes a long way to explain the currency’s winning streak over most major currencies including the dollar. The Aussie is still on course for its 4th weekly rise over the dollar and before Thursday had risen vs the dollar for the past six days.

USD: Investors seek safety in new trade tensions

Investors are now looking out toward a new possible headwind to the Aussie, and a reason to opt for the safety of US dollars: the rekindled trade war between the United States and China.

The Australian dollar is often used as a proxy for China’s economy because the Chinese yuan is controlled by the People’s Bank of China. That’s because China is Australia’s biggest export market for its raw materials.

The dollar has been gaining since yesterday’s coronavirus briefing with US President Donald Trump where he questioned China’s official narrative around the coronavirus, suggesting that the virus came out of a virus laboratory in Wuhan and that China purposely allowed the virus to spread.


Currencylive.com is a news site only and not a currency trading platform.
Currencylive.com is a site operated by TransferWise Inc. (“We”, “Us”), a Delaware Corporation. We do not guarantee that the website will operate in an uninterrupted or error-free manner or is free of viruses or other harmful components. The content on our site is provided for general information only and is not intended as an exhaustive treatment of its subject. We expressly disclaim any contractual or fiduciary relationship with you on the basis of the content of our site, any you may not rely thereon for any purpose. You should consult with qualified professionals or specialists before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Although we make reasonable efforts to update the information on our site, we make no representations, warranties or guarantees, whether express or implied, that the content on our site is accurate, complete or up to date, and DISCLAIM ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Some of the content posted on this site has been commissioned by Us, but is the work of independent contractors. These contractors are not employees, workers, agents or partners of TransferWise and they do not hold themselves out as one. The information and content posted by these independent contractors have not been verified or approved by Us. The views expressed by these independent contractors on currencylive.com do not represent our views.