0.6915 is where the Australian dollar forced the market to pay attention Tuesday, with AUD/USD trading higher after the Reserve Bank of Australia signaled it isn’t ready to declare victory on inflation.
The pair advanced near 0.6915 as investors weighed hawkish RBA Meeting Minutes against a modest improvement in US Consumer Confidence, according to FXStreet. The immediate read: Australia’s central bank still sounds restrictive, while the US Dollar found only neutral support after partially falling on end-of-quarter profit-taking.
AUD/USD climbs toward 0.6915 after the RBA keeps 4.35% in play
The RBA Minutes from the June 16 meeting showed policymakers unanimously left the cash rate unchanged at 4.35%. That part was not the market mover. The sharper signal was that officials kept the door open to more tightening if inflation does not return sustainably to target.
The Board noted that inflation remains “materially above target,” policy needs to stay restrictive, and it would do what is necessary to deliver price stability and full employment, including raising rates again if needed.
That language gave AUD/USD a lift even as US data leaned mildly supportive for the dollar. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index rose to 91.2 in June from May’s revised 90.6, suggesting household sentiment improved slightly.
The dollar did not seize control of the session. FXStreet said the Greenback remained neutral after partially falling because of end-of-quarter profit-taking, while traders continued to judge whether the US economy is strong enough to keep the Federal Reserve cautious.
For readers tracking the pair’s broader chart setup, XOOMAR’s separate technical coverage, 0.6900 Cracks as AUD/USD Price Forecast Targets 0.6830, gives context on how quickly this zone can turn into a battleground.
RBA inflation caution gives the Australian dollar a rate support edge
The RBA’s message matters because it pushes back against any quick pivot narrative. The Minutes said the Australian economy still faces excess demand and broad-based cost pressure. They also noted that the Australian Dollar had depreciated slightly since the previous meeting, partly because of lower yield differentials against the United States and softer commodity prices.
That mix matters for AUD/USD. A central bank that keeps policy restrictive can give its currency rate support, especially when the other side of the pair lacks a clean catalyst. Tuesday’s US confidence data improved, but only modestly.
The session’s core signals lined up this way:
| Driver | Latest figure or signal | AUD/USD read |
|---|---|---|
| RBA cash rate | Held at 4.35% on June 16 | Hawkish hold supports AUD |
| RBA inflation view | Inflation remains “materially above target” | Keeps tightening risk alive |
| US Consumer Confidence | 91.2 in June from 90.6 | Mild USD support, not decisive |
| China Manufacturing PMI | 50.3 from 50.0, above 50.1 forecast | Supports Australia-linked sentiment |
| China Non-Manufacturing PMI | 50.2 from 50.1, above 49.9 forecast | Adds to risk and demand support |
China added another tailwind. The NBS Manufacturing PMI returned to expansion territory at 50.3, while the NBS Non-Manufacturing PMI improved to 50.2. Since China is Australia’s largest trading partner, stronger Chinese manufacturing and services readings tend to support the Aussie through commodity demand expectations and broader risk appetite.
This is where the Tuesday move becomes more than a simple rate story. The RBA supplied the hawkish spark, US confidence failed to overpower it, and China data improved the backdrop for an economy tied closely to external demand.
For a separate Australia-China context beyond the FX screen, XOOMAR’s coverage of the Australia Vanuatu Military Deal Boxes Out China in Pacific tracks the strategic side of that relationship.
AUD/USD levels: 0.6930 is the first test, 0.6989 is the bigger ceiling
The near-term chart still asks for confirmation. On FXStreet’s 4-hour setup, AUD/USD traded at 0.6915, holding above the 20-period Simple Moving Average at 0.6895. That points to a modest constructive tone.
The larger barrier sits higher. The pair remains capped by the 100-period SMA at 0.6989, while initial resistance appears at 0.6930. The Relative Strength Index near 54 sits just above its midline, suggesting momentum has improved but has not broken into a stronger trend.
Support is tight below spot:
- Immediate support: 0.6904 and the 20-period SMA at 0.6895
- Secondary floor: 0.6890
- Deeper support: 0.6868, where FXStreet said buyers would be expected to re-emerge if the pair retreats
- Initial resistance: 0.6930
- Major topside barrier: 0.6989
The technical read in FXStreet’s report was written with help from an AI tool, so the levels matter more than the label. Price action around 0.6904 and 0.6895 will show whether Tuesday’s bounce has follow-through or merely reflects a short-term reaction to the RBA Minutes.
The next pressure point comes from US data. Related market context points to JOLTS due later Tuesday and Nonfarm Payrolls later in the week, both relevant to whether traders keep the Fed in cautious mode.
For now, AUD/USD has momentum, but it hasn’t cleared the range. A hold above the nearby moving average keeps the Australian dollar bid. A break above 0.6930 would sharpen focus on 0.6989. If US labor data strengthen the dollar side of the pair, the Aussie’s advance could stall before it gets there.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- The Australian dollar gained as the RBA signaled inflation remains too high to rule out further tightening.
- US confidence improved only slightly, limiting the dollar’s ability to push back against AUD strength.
- AUD/USD near 0.6915 reflects a market weighing restrictive Australian policy against cautious US economic signals.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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