Trading ideas in the Aussie Dollar usually attract a lot of attention. Why? Because currency trader have found the A$ to be a trending market, and friendly trending markets can make up for faulty day trades. The action may be in day trading, but the cash cows, if there are any in forex, seem to be in the long term trends.
The monthly charts in the AUDUSD is enlightening. The financial collapse in 2008 took the A$ from a high of 98.50 to a quick retreat to the 60 handle. After six months of consolidation, the market then rallied from about 70 to 94, topping in November of 2009. Again capturing a portion of this move would have been quite profitable.
On the monthly charts, we have drawn trend lines, and they portray a market that is coiling, getting ready for a retest of the 1.10, or as respected analyst Tim Clayton suggests, may be setting up for a return to the 82 handle.
To fully understand Clayton's views it is best to take a closer look at his article from Seeking Alpha.
"2012 Preview - Australian Dollar Set For Rough Year
The Australian dollar is likely to be dominated by global risk
conditions for much of 2012 and looks set for a renewed decline at the
start of the year. Asian economic doubts are set to intensify and
financial sector de-leveraging remains an extremely important issue at a
global level, both key factors that work against the Australian
currency. Throughout the year, selling into strength looks to be the
best approach as it heads toward the 0.82 area against the US dollar.
Bearish bets on the Chinese economy are hazardous at the best of
times, especially given the opaque nature of data collection and
reporting. It has also become extremely fashionable to look for bad news
in the Chinese property sector as media stories of ghost towns
multiply. It is, therefore, easy to gain a distorted impression.
Nevertheless, alarm bells are ringing very clearly surrounding the
housing sector, lending and the banking sector. There is also increasing
stress surrounding local-government finance as bad-debts escalate.
Throughout history, is has proved impossible to engineer a soft
landing from the size of credit boom seen in China since 2007. Maybe the
Chinese leadership can defy the historical odds and guide the economy
to a controlled slowdown, but it does not look to be an attractive bet.
If China heads for a hard landing then the Asian dominoes will feel the
full effect as regional demand slows and there will inevitably be an
increase in trade tensions.
There is likely to be a further phase
of deleveraging within the global banking sector, which will also slow
potential growth as lending is curtailed. All the BRIC economies are
likely to face tough challenges during 2012, especially with Russia
again facing increased political risk.
There will be an important
negative impact on the Australian economy, especially if trade disputes
increase and there is likely to be downward pressure on commodity
prices. The Reserve Bank will be prepared to cut interest rates
further, which would also push the currency lower.
The domestic
economy is unlikely to provide strong support for the currency with
spending and investment growth set to slow as the housing sector remains
under pressure with property levels still substantially above the
long-term equilibrium level.
Working in the Australian dollar’s
favour will be the fact that interest rates in the G7 area will remain
at rock-bottom levels during the year. The Federal Reserve, at this
stage, is committed to keeping short-term rates below 0.25% throughout
the year and there will be strong pressure for the ECB to cut rates
again from 1.0% now. The lack of attractive alternatives and low G7
interest rates will certainly give the Australian dollar significant
support at times. The currency will also be supported by Australia’s
AAA credit rating, which will attract sovereign reserve managers as the
number of AAA-rated countries is set to dwindle still further in 2012."
Making long term predictions at the first of the year, are popular, but good analysis should not take place because of a calendar ritual. In the case of the Aussie, however, a bearish strategy seems worth considering.
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