CBA with 4 reasons why they think the AUD won't decline in the face of US rate rises:
- Structural improvement in Australia's current-account deficit (to 0.6% of GDP vs 4-5% of GDP in 2001 period)
- Asian and global GDP growth remains firm, and Asia is running a current-account surplus (in 2001 the region had a large current-account deficit, and was recovering from 1997-98 Asian financial crisis)
- Australia's terms of trade is 62% higher than 2001
- U.S. dollar is unlikely to see strength vs majors, unlike 2001 (absent delivery of US company tax cuts, USD is unlikely to appreciate much)
It would be surprising if AUD/USD fell below its December 2016 level of 0.7160 simply because there was a negative Australia-U.S. rate differential
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Note:
The Australia-U.S. 2 year interest rate differential was negative in 1997, AUD/USD fell nearly 25% by end 1998
And further (18 months later) to under 0.48 by April 2001
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via Bloomberg