Australian Dollar Down As Private Capital Spending Missed, China PMI DIP

 | Jun 01, 2017 03:44AM ET

Australian dollar was given a brief boost by retail sales data in Asian session but quickly reversed. It's trading as the biggest loser so far for the day and the week. Retail sales rose 1.0% mom in April, above expectation of 0.3% mom. However, markets seem to be more sensitive to private capital expenditure, which rose a mere 0.3% in Q1, even worse than expectation of 0.5%. Meanwhile, China's private Caixin PMI manufacturing tumbled to 49.6 in May, down from 50.3 and missed expectation of 50.2. That's the first contraction reading in 11 months. Comparing with the official PMI, the Caixin one focuses more on SMEs and indicates that these companies could be under some pressure in May which might drag down the economy ahead.

Kiwi firms up mildly

New Zealand Dollar, on the other hand, is lifted mildly by as terms of trade index rose 5.1% qoq, in Q1, just slightly down from prior quarter's 5.8% qoq, and beat expectation of 3.9% qoq. The Kiwi was also supported by comments from RBNZ governor Graeme Wheeler earlier this week that risks to the financial system, domestically and from broad, have reduced. AUD/NZD extends the decline from March high at 1.1017 to as low as 1.0045 so far. It's clear that the corrective rebound from 1.0234 has completed with three waves up to 1.1017. Near term outlook will stay bearish as long as 1.0608 resistance holds, for 1.0323 support and then 1.0234 low.