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A world of persistent inflation and hawkish central banks creates a prime environment for carry trades, even with moderating growth. Within the G10, currencies of energy exporters with high yields, like the Australian Dollar and Norwegian Krone, are particularly attractive. Their carry advantage over the US dollar is at its highest level in nearly a decade.

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Even if geopolitical conflicts resolve and growth recovers, inflation and energy prices are expected to remain elevated. This structural "regime shift" makes central bank policy more challenging and firmly places the emphasis on FX carry strategies, where investors profit from interest rate differentials between currencies.

The Reserve Bank of Australia's recent rate hike is a major structural shift. It has created positive policy rate spreads against the US dollar, a dynamic unseen in five years. This positive carry provides a new, fundamental support for the AUD beyond just general risk appetite or commodity prices.

Real carry factors (adjusted for inflation) are currently outperforming nominal carry factors across G10, EM, and global FX. This dynamic is a pattern historically observed in the early stages of inflationary developments, making it a key forward-looking indicator for macro traders.

With dollar correlations at elevated levels, finding cheap, clean directional expressions against the dollar is challenging. Sophisticated traders are creating bearish dollar baskets that mix G10 currencies (AUD, NOK) with Emerging Market currencies (HUF, ZAR) to achieve greater pricing efficiency.

Beyond the typical 'flight to safety' in the US dollar during a crisis, a more nuanced currency play exists. Currencies of commodity-exporting countries, such as the Brazilian Real and Australian Dollar, are positioned to benefit from the positive terms-of-trade impact of higher energy prices.

For FX carry strategies, inflation is a more critical driver than growth. This is because inflation forces divergent central bank responses, creating the yield dispersion that carry trades exploit. Growth only becomes the dominant factor during a recessionary shock, when carry strategies typically collapse.

The Federal Reserve's dovish stance, combined with a resilient global growth outlook, creates a favorable environment for "pro-cyclical" currencies like the Australian Dollar and Norwegian Krone. This "middle of the dollar smile" scenario suggests betting on currencies sensitive to global economic momentum, not just betting against the dollar.

While the Australian dollar benefits from high yields and its status as an energy exporter, its high-beta nature makes it vulnerable in a risk-off environment. The optimal strategy is to long the AUD against vulnerable energy importers like the Euro, isolating the relative fundamental strengths.

The conflict has shifted the FX regime from pro-cyclical to risk-off, making the US dollar attractive as a high-yielder, defensive asset, and energy exporter. Beyond the dollar, the primary theme is pairing energy exporting currencies (like AUD, NOK, BRL) against energy importing currencies (like EUR), which are most vulnerable.

The resilience of the Australian Dollar and Norwegian Krone amid market volatility stems from strong domestic data like jobs and inflation. This fuels hawkish central bank expectations, decoupling their value from being simple commodity-linked currencies and highlighting the importance of internal cyclical strength.