Award-winning online broker, GO Markets Pty Ltd (GO Markets), is making it easier to trade the ASX with a new and improved platform launched this week; Shares by GO Markets. With a streamlined application process and an enticing launch offer, Shares by GO Markets offers an enhanced trading experience for Aussie traders. Features of Shares by GO Markets: Available as a web trading platform and a mobile app.
Integrated charts by TradingView; a powerful technical analysis tool for beginners through to experienced investors. Realtime funding; once your funds clear within your Macquarie CMA, you'll be able to trade straight away. Modern interface for intuitive trading on the GO and at home.
Secure App login using biometric security i.g. Face ID or Fingerprint. Easy Portfolio Management; keep track of the status of your holdings anywhere and anytime.
Informative reports and insights; get detailed reports and insight into your financial decisions. Click to Refresh price data (Free). Live streaming data available ($27.50 incl GST per month).
This cost is a pass through cost from the ASX. After market hours order placement. Head of Trading & Operations in Equities, Gheric Gamboa expressed enthusiasm about the new platform, stating that "it marks a significant leap forward in providing our users with advanced trading tools, real-time analytics, and an intuitive interface".
The platform has been built in partnership with Novus Fintech. Viet Hoang, CEO of Novus Fintech, expressed his appreciation for the collaborative effort with GO Markets Securities Pty Ltd (GO Markets Securities). "The combined efforts have resulted in a cutting-edge trading platform catering to everyone from beginners to the more advanced traders." New clients to GO Markets Securities will receive their first 15 trades with ZERO brokerage fees. Trades will then carry a low, flat-rate brokerage fee of $7.70 thereafter.
GO Markets Securities Pty Ltd (ABN 24 653 400 527) is a Corporate Authorised Representative of GO Markets Pty Ltd (ABN 85 081 864 039 | AFSL 254963).
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GO Markets
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2025 has seen a material decline in the fortunes of the greenback. A technical structure breakdown early in the year was followed by a breach of the 200-day moving average (MA) at the end of Q1. The index then entered correction territory, printing a three-year low at the end of Q2.
Since then, we have seen attempts to build a technical base, including a re-test of the end-of-June lows in mid-September. However, buying pressure has not been strong enough to push price back above the technically critical and psychologically important 100 level.
What the levels suggest from here
As things stand, the index remains more than 10% lower for 2025. On this technical view, the index may revisit the 96 area. However, technical levels can fail and outcomes depend on multiple factors.
US dollar index
Source: TradingView
The key question for 2026
The key question remains: are we likely to see further losses in the early part of next year and beyond, or will current support hold?
We cannot assess the US dollar in isolation and any outlook is shaped by internal and global factors, not least its relative strength versus other major currencies. Many of these drivers are interrelated, but four potential headwinds stand out for any US dollar recovery. Collectively, they may keep downside pressure in play.
Four headwinds for any US dollar recovery
1. The US dollar as a safe-haven trade
One scenario where US dollar support has historically been evident is during major global events, slowdowns and market shocks. However, the more muted response of the US dollar during risk-off episodes this year suggests a shift away from the historical norm, with fewer sustained US dollar rallies.
Instead, throughout 2025, some investors appearedto favour gold, and at other times, FX and even equities, rather than into the US dollar. If this change in behaviour persists through 2026, it could make recovery harder, even if global economic pressure builds over the year ahead.
2. US versus global trade
Trade policy is harder to measure objectively, and outcomes can be difficult to predict. That said, trade battles driven by tariffs on US imports are often viewed as an additional potential drag on the US dollar.
The impact may be twofold if additional strain is placed on the US economy through:
a slowdown in global trade volumes as impacted countries seek alternative trade relationships, with supply chain distortions that may not favour US growth
pressure on US corporate profit margins as tariffs lift costs for importers
3. Removal of quantitative tightening
The Fed formally halted its balance sheet reduction, quantitative tightening (QT), as of 1 December 2025, ending a program that shrank assets by roughly US$2.4 trillion since mid-2022.
Traditionally, ending QT is seen as marginally negative for the US dollar because it stops the withdrawal of liquidity, can ease global funding conditions, and may reduce the scarcity that can support dollar demand. Put simply, more dollars in the system can soften the currency’s support at the margin, although outcomes have varied historically and often depend on broader financial conditions.
4. Interest rate differential
Interest rate differential (IRD) is likely to be a primary driver of US dollar strength, or otherwise, in the months ahead. The latest FOMC meeting delivered the expected 0.25% cut, with attention on guidance for what may come next.
Even after a softer-than-expected CPI print, markets have been reluctant to price aggressive near-term easing. At the time of writing, less than a 20% chance of a January cut is priced in, and it may be March before we see the next move.
The Fed is balancing sticky inflation against a jobs market under pressure, with the headline rate back at levels last seen in 2012. The practical takeaway is that a more accommodative stance may add to downward pressure on the US dollar.
Current expectations imply around two rate cuts through 2026, with the potential for further easing beyond that, broadly consistent with the median projections shown in the chart below. These are forecasts rather than guarantees, and they can shift as economic data and policy guidance evolve.
Source: US Federal Reserve, Summart of Economic Projections