AUDUSD: Potential U-Turn at the Start of the New Year Fueled by Continued CPI Slowdown

The EURUSD's mid-term uptrend has hit the pause button, chilling in a tight range of 1.09-1.10 for the sixth day straight, hugging the lower edge of the trend channel:

Last Friday's dollar-buying signal, triggered by a robust NFP report that outperformed expectations in job growth, unemployment, and wage increase, got dampened by a pretty weak US Services PMI, especially the hiring component. It plummeted below 50 to 43.7 points, raising concerns that official labor market stats in the early months of the new year might take a hit (as PMI indicators are forward-looking). This, in turn, cranks up the pressure on the Fed to ease policy in March. So, last Friday, EURUSD reacted with a 'sawtooth' pattern, dropping to 1.0880 and later bouncing back to 1.10. This week's consolidation likely stems from uncertainty ahead of Thursday's US inflation report (CPI), which could set the forex trend for several days or even a week.
Technically speaking, the current EURUSD pattern – consolidation near the lower edge of a fairly lengthy uptrend (over two months) – often precedes a breakthrough below the lower boundary.
A slightly wider range is still forming for GBPUSD – the price has been waltzing between 1.26 and 1.28 for almost a month. The preceding trend to this range, like with EURUSD, popped up in mid-November when the market started to factor in a change in the Fed's QE stance in Q1 2024:

Today, the head of the Bank of England, Bailey, will speak, and the market will be watching to see if he leans towards taming inflation or preventing further economic slowdown. Recent economic output data showed that the UK teetered on the edge of a recession in Q3 2023; GDP shrank by 0.1%. The BoE's latest communication expressed uncertainty about growth prospects in Q4, indicating rising pressure to shift the tone towards a more market-friendly monetary policy that boosts credit growth. However, compared to the EU and the US, inflation in the UK is higher, making the dilemma sharper for the BoE than for counterparts in other leading countries. Friday's data on monthly GDP changes, construction volumes, and trade balances in the UK should shed light on which alternative the BoE will ultimately lean towards.
A more intriguing situation is unfolding on the AUDUSD chart – since the new year kicked in, the price has switched to a downtrend, bouncing off a long-term resistance line:

Today, Australia's monthly CPI indicator was released. Inflation continued to slow down in November, beating expectations at 4.3% on an annual basis against the forecasted 4.4%. In the recent RBA meeting, rate hikes were put on hold, citing the need to assess the effectiveness of the previous series of increases. The new price data increases the likelihood that the tightening pause will be extended, which should negatively impact the attractiveness of the AUD. Considering the technical aspect of the AUDUSD chart, the risks of further decline are growing.
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