[DAILY TRADING] AUDUSD Analysis 29 June 2026 – Aussie Holds at 0.6894 as USD Strength and RBA Hold Collide
The Vantage AUDUSD CFD, the Australian dollar-US dollar currency pair, is trading at 0.68937 as of 03:00 UTC (11:00 GMT+8) on 29 June 2026. The pair is on course for another monthly decline, with June down over 3.5%, as broad USD strength weighs on risk assets and the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) held its cash rate at 4.35% in June without clearly opening the door to further hikes.
All prices reference the Vantage AUDUSD CFD. This is not financial advice.
Key points
- AUDUSD opened the session at 0.68937 on 29 June 2026, with the MA50 (0.68990) and MA200 (0.68943) from the TradingView setup converging just above; a tight cluster that markets often watch for a directional resolution.
- The RBA held at 4.35% in June 2026 and signalled inflation is still above target; markets are pricing roughly a 50% chance of one more hike later in 2026. [1]
- AUD/USD is on course for another monthly decline, with June 2026 down over 3.5% and up 5.54% over 12 months; USD demand from Middle East tensions and a tech-driven equity selloff have been the dominant June 2026 drivers. [2]
What the AUDUSD chart shows today
On the 15-minute AUD to USD chart from TradingView, price fell steadily from near 0.6980 between 23 and 25 June 2026 before a sharper drop on 26 June brought the pair to an intraday low approaching 0.6870. A partial recovery pushed price back above 0.6880, and the pair has since consolidated in a narrow band around 0.6889-0.6895.
At the current session open, the MA50 (0.68990) and MA200 (0.68943) from the TradingView setup used for this analysis are flat and sitting less than 5 pips apart, just above price at 0.68937. Both moving averages tracked lower through most of June 2026 alongside price; their recent flattening is notable. The RSI (14, close) reads 53.43 with its moving average overlay at 44.99; the RSI line above the overlay at the session open suggests short-term momentum has tilted mildly positive within the session, though it is well inside neutral territory and does not confirm a reversal of June’s broader decline.

AUD fundamental analysis: what is driving the pair
The RBA left the cash rate at 4.35% at its June 2026 meeting, its fourth consecutive hold. Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser said on 25 June 2026 that the central bank still has more work to do to bring inflation back to the 2-3% target. Australia’s May headline CPI fell to 4.0% from 4.2%, the slowest in three months, but the trimmed mean rose to 3.6% annually, above forecasts. The mixed inflation signals left markets divided over whether another RBA rate increase would be necessary later this year. Pricing currently reflects around a 50% chance of one more hike later in 2026, with August seen as unlikely. [1][3]
The labour market provided partial support. Australia added 40,300 jobs in May 2026, rebounding from a revised decline of 40,600 in April 2026 and beating the 30,000 forecast. The unemployment rate edged down to 4.4% from 4.5%. The data briefly supported the AUD USD news cycle but was not enough to offset a broadly firm US dollar. [2]
On the USD side, the DXY approached 13-month highs in late June 2026 as markets continued pricing a hawkish Federal Reserve under Chair Kevin Warsh, who took office in May 2026. A tech-driven global equity selloff on 24 June 2026 pushed AUDUSD down 1.2% in a single session, with Middle East geopolitical tensions adding to risk-off demand for the dollar. The AUD/USD outlook has shifted materially since February 2026, when the pair traded above 0.72. [4][2]
Key levels on the Vantage AUDUSD CFD
Reference levels as of 03:00 UTC (11:00 GMT+8) on 29 June 2026. These are observational reference points, not trade signals.
| Level | Price | Type | Context |
| Near support | 0.6875 | 26 June 2026 swing low | Session low from 26 June 2026; held on the Vantage CFD |
| MA200 | 0.68943 | Moving average | MA200 from the TradingView setup; price is just below |
| MA50 | 0.68990 | Moving average | MA50 from the TradingView setup; first resistance above |
| Near resistance | 0.6920-0.6930 | Session highs | 27-28 June 2026 intraday highs; capped the recovery |
Table 1: AUDUSD key levels, 29 June 2026. Sources: Vantage AUDUSD CFD, TradingView. Indicative only.
What to watch
Upcoming events that could shift the aud to usd picture:
- China PMI, 30 June: Australia’s largest trading partner. Manufacturing and services readings above 50 would support risk appetite and could provide indirect support for the Aussie.
- US ISM Manufacturing PMI, 1 July 2026: A stronger reading reinforces the USD bid; a miss could ease some pressure on AUD/USD.
- US Non-Farm Payrolls, 2 July 2026: The key read on whether the Fed’s hawkish hold continues. A notable downside miss would likely reprice Fed expectations and ease USD demand.
- RBA August meeting: Any inflation data over the next four weeks that shifts the 50% hike pricing materially will be a key AUD USD news driver.
- Middle East developments: Geopolitical tensions have been a consistent source of USD safe-haven demand through June 2026. Any shift in that picture would flow through to risk currencies including the Aussie.
Risk considerations
Market participants often monitor the 0.6875 swing low from 26 June 2026 as a reference point for short-term exposure management on the Vantage AUDUSD CFD. Stop Loss placement relative to a defined level is one factor market participants often consider, particularly in a compressed range where data events over the next week carry the potential to shift the aud to usd outlook materially.
Leverage works in both directions on AUDUSD CFDs; it amplifies losses as readily as it magnifies upside. Position sizing relative to account equity is one factor market participants often consider when trading a pair that has registered back-to-back monthly losses and has material event risk ahead. Leverage is a double-edged instrument in CFD trading.

RISK WARNING: CFDs are complex financial instruments and carry a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. You should ensure you fully understand the risks involved and carefully consider whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money before trading.
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References
[1] “RBA June 2026 board decision and cash rate at 4.35% – Reserve Bank of Australia” https://www.rba.gov.au/ Accessed on 29 June 2026.
[2] “Australian dollar: exchange rate, news and data – Trading Economics” https://tradingeconomics.com/australia/currency Accessed on 29 June 2026.
[3] “RBA Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser, speech 25 June 2026 – Reserve Bank of Australia” https://www.rba.gov.au/ Accessed on 29 June 2026.
[4] “AUD/USD 2026 outlook: policy divergence and a shifting dollar trend – Forex.com” https://www.forex.com/en-us/news-and-analysis/aud-usd-2026-outlook-policy-divergence-and-a-shifting-dollar-trend/ Accessed on 29 June 2026.