Fundamental view:
Aussie showed a confusing trend against greenback in the previous week. The greenback strengthened on the back of soaring government bond yields. Whereas, The Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Philip Lowe reiterated that “the bank remains committed to the three-year yield target,” but he did not leave alone with words, he turned to deeds. The RBA stopped the Commonwealth treasury and lended out three-year government bonds. it massively increased the cost of borrowing these bonds, making it prohibitively expensive to short-sell them. US Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell has repeated multiple times those changes to the monetary policy do not depend on yields but mostly on a recovery in the employment sector. These different stances give an advantage to the aussie.
US Wholesale Sales on 8th March and US Michigan Consumer Expectations on 12th March favored bearish trend whereas Australia NAB Business Confidence on 9th March and US EIA Crude Oil Stocks Change on 10th March favored bullish trend for the pair.
The major economic events deciding the movement of the pair in the next week are US Retail Sales monthly report at Mar 16, US EIA Crude Oil Stocks Change, Fed Interest Rate Decision at Mar 17, Australia Employment Change, US Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index, US Initial Jobless Claims at Mar 18 and Australia Retail Sales monthly report at Mar 19.
AUD/USD Weekly outlook: