The Australian dollar weakened around $0.664 on Thursday, easing from a three-month high, as investors weighed the latest labor market figures for clues on the Reserve Bank’s policy direction. The economy unexpectedly lost 21,300 jobs in November, the most in nine months, driven entirely by full-time positions, while fewer people entered the workforce, keeping the unemployment rate steady at 4.3%. The softer-than-expected data suggest a gradual easing in the labor market, prompting traders to push back expectations for rate hikes to the second half of 2026, from earlier bets on May. However, the central bank still views the labor market as tight, pointing to high job vacancies, widespread staffing shortages, rising labor costs, and indicators that the economy remains near full employment. Elsewhere, the AUD found support from a weaker US dollar after the Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 bps, while Chair Powell’s post-meeting comments surprised markets expecting a more hawkish tone.
Read Next
Forex
12 hours ago
AUD/USD Loses Nearly 1%
Markets
14 hours ago
Three Markets to Watch Next Week
Forex
2 days ago
South Korean Won Nears 2009 Lows
Markets
2 days ago
Chart of The Day – EUR/USD
12 hours ago
AUD/USD Loses Nearly 1%
13 hours ago
EUR/USD Price Forecast: Ends week near 1.1400, down below the 200-DMA
14 hours ago
Three Markets to Watch Next Week
2 days ago
South Korean Won Nears 2009 Lows
2 days ago
Offshore Yuan Extends Fall, Still Eyes Weekly Gain
2 days ago
Chart of The Day – EUR/USD
3 days ago
EUR/USD slips below 1.1550 as US Dollar gains on heightened inflationary risks
3 days ago
NZD/USD falls to near 0.5900 as risk aversion increases on Middle East war
3 days ago
AUD/USD Price Moves away from multi-year top, slides to 0.7125 amid firmer USD
3 days ago
USD/CHF gains above 0.7800 amid Fed hawkish hold expectations
Related Articles
Check Also
Close





