General
Australian dollar tipped to hit 80 US cents on back of coronavirus recovery and China’s demand for steel

The Australian dollar is expected to keep rising as long as China’s hunger for steel remains insatiable and the US struggles to control its COVID-19 outbreak.
Key points:
- In March, the currency briefly plunged to an 18-year low (55.08 US cents)
- A weaker US dollar and surging iron ore prices have driven the Australian dollar higher
- The RBA is expected to ramp up its stimulus measures in 2021
That is essentially why the local currency has risen to a 2.5-year high (about 76 US cents) — despite a “once-in-a-century” pandemic — according to currency experts from the nation’s major banks.
Although there are big differences in their forecasts, the common thread is their expectation of a much stronger Australian dollar.
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