The Australian dollar fell to an 8-month low today against the Canadian dollar, breaching technical support and breaking out of a 3-cent range. This commodity currency cross is one of the least volatile trades in the forex market because eliminates much of the ‘risk’ trade and allows market participants to focus on the relative strengths of Australia and Canada. Last week, Canada posted the largest one-month gain in jobs in history and that has increased speculation that the Bank of Canada will hike interest rates in June. On May 12, Australia will reveal its April jobs report. The market is expecting 22.5K new jobs. The strength of the report will be a big factor in whether the Reserve Bank of Australia raises interest rates. The market, however, is showing that it expects the Bank of Canada to hike rates more than the RBA in the coming 18 months.
As we can see, the pair carved out a rough range between 0.9178 and 0.9475 (297 pips) since the start of the year. Today, the range broke to the downside after higher-than-expected Chinese CPI cooled optimism for the Asia-Pacific region. Technically, the measured target of the range and breakout is 0.8881, which corresponds very well with the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the huge March 2009 to Nov. 2009 rally at 0.8867. Other support includes the July 2009 major low of 0.8796 and the Aug. 2009 low of 0.8983.
Short-term momentum indicators show the pair as oversold. The RSI has fallen to 28.70 and we are beyond the lower reaches of the Bollinger bands. That indicates that the market is potentially oversold in extremely short-term durations. It should be noted, however, that momentum indicators usually flash overbought/oversold signals after a range break.
Beward of tonight’s Austrlian employment report.
