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Depressed near one-week low under 0.7300 from wisepowder's blog

Depressed near one-week low under 0.7300

AUD/USD remains on the back foot after posting the biggest losses in a month. The aussie pair begins the key trading day, comprising the US employment data, while keeping the recent 0.7265-82 range, currently around 0.7275, at the start of Friday's Asian session. The pair's declines are mostly attributed to the US dollar's sustained pullback from the multi-month low, followed by a slump in the Wall Street benchmarks. Also weighing the quote could be worried concerning the US stimulus and escalating Sino-American tension.To get more news about WikiFX, you can visit wikifx official website.
  After loosing +140 pips so far during September, AUD/USD questions the bulls to reassess their bets. Though, the previous five-month rally from the sub-0.6000 area terms the recent declines as a mere consolidation than anything else.
Even so, market players need to be cautious as the US Dollar Index (DXY) probes a three-week-old resistance line following its U-turn from a 28-month low. The greenback gauge respects the market's rush to risk-safety amid uncertainty over the American stimulus and escalating US-China tension. Also favoring the US currency could be the Fed policymakers' clears view of keeping the monetary policy easy and without doubt, unlike others on the line that still lack directions.


  It's worth mentioning that the US Jobless Claims and the activity numbers were also less harmful on Thursday. The same reversed fears of a heavy disappointment from today's Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) after Wednesday's ADP data slipped below marked consensus of 950K to 428K.
  Elsewhere, China's Global Times (GT) recently threatened the US to cut its American debt holdings after the Trump administration announced extra hardships for Beijing diplomats. One should know that China is the world's second-largest holder of US debt.
  Against this backdrop, Wall Street benchmarks witness the sea of red led by the Nasdaq's 5.0% losses and 1.5 basis points of the US 10-year Treasury yields.


The Wall

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