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Free · macro currency strength · the 8 majors

Which currencies are actually strong right now?

A 100% free macro currency strength meter: five forces — interest rates, growth, positioning, risk appetite and commodities — turned into one score per major (+100 to −100), for the weeks-to-months macro view.

01Interest RatesCarry & yield differentials
02GrowthMomentum of the economy
03PositioningHow big funds are betting
04Risk MoodSafe-haven vs risk-on flows
05CommoditiesTerms-of-trade tailwinds
How it worksThe full methodology

Central Bank Watch

Next scheduled rate decisions — the biggest planned movers of these scores
NZDNZD RBNZ Reserve Bank of New Zealand Jul 08 in 6 days
EUREUR ECB European Central Bank Jul 23 in 21 days
USDUSD Fed Federal Reserve Jul 29 in 27 days
CADCAD BoC Bank of Canada Jul 29 in 27 days
JPYJPY BoJ Bank of Japan Jul 31 in 29 days
GBPGBP BoE Bank of England Aug 06 in 35 days
AUDAUD RBA Reserve Bank of Australia Aug 11 in 40 days
CHFCHF SNB Swiss National Bank Sep 24 in 84 days

Dates per official central-bank calendars (announcement day).

Widest Pair Gaps

Where the fundamental edge is most one-sided right now

Fundamentals vs Price

Score = what the fundamentals justify. Price = what actually traded. A persistent spread means the move isn’t priced in yet — or the model is early.
Fundamental score composite of five macro factors · normalised −100…+100 · 4h cadence
+100+500−50−100
Relative Currency Performance spot return vs equal-weight basket · rebased to 0 at window start · %

Highlighting the strongest, the weakest and the biggest recent mover by default — click a currency chip to add or remove others. Both charts share the selection.

Strength Ranking

−100 to +100 · relative to the other majors
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The board is stable — little has changed since the last update.
Scores within ±15 are effectively neutral — small gaps in the middle aren’t significant. Click any currency for its breakdown · ▲▼ = 30-day trend · small ±number = change since last update

Currency Deep Dive

Pick a currency — the five pillars, the raw data and the written read
Australian Dollar +21 Rank #1 of 8 · Slightly Strong Full AUD page →
What's driving it
Interest Rates +74
Growth -33
Positioning +35
Risk Mood +21
Commodities -28
Underlying data
Short-term rate4.43%as of 2026-05-01
Real rate (after inflation)+2.03% (2.4% CPI)as of 2026-05-01
10-year yield4.99%as of 2026-05-01
Real 10-year (after inflation)+2.59% (2.4% CPI)as of 2026-05-01
Unemployment4.5%as of 2026-04-01
Fund positioning87th pctileas of 2026-06-23
Commodity momentum-0.62σas of 2026-07-01
3-month move vs USD-0.3%
Valuation (vs 1-yr norm)near fair value
Analysis
The Australian Dollar currently leads all eight major currencies with a macro strength score of +21. The biggest tailwind is interest rates. With a short-term rate around 4.4%, the Australian Dollar offers a meaningful yield advantage over most of its peers, which tends to attract capital into the currency. Institutional positioning is a clear tailwind — large futures traders are heavily net-long the Australian Dollar, among the most bullish readings in years. That is strong conviction, though a crowded long can be vulnerable to a squeeze if sentiment turns. Broader risk appetite is positive, which helps the Australian Dollar. As a currency tied to global growth and trade activity, it tends to strengthen when investors feel confident and weaken when they retreat to safety. Weak metals like iron ore prices are an additional drag. As a commodity-linked currency, the Australian Dollar is sensitive to its export basket, and falling prices there erode the terms of trade. The economy is a concern. Rising unemployment and softening labour data suggest the growth outlook is weakening, which could push the central bank toward easier policy down the line.

Pair Strength Matrix

Row vs column — blue = row stronger. Click a cell for the full pair analysis.

Research

The journal — plain-English macro notes from the desk
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