Showing posts with label #eurusd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #eurusd. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2022

EURUSD: On course to test the October 13 low near 0.9635 – BBH



EURUSD extends the corrective decline and revisits the 0.9750 region. Economists at BBH expect the worl's most popular currency pair to challenge the October 13 low near 0.9635.

ECB tightening expectations have fallen back a bit

EURUSD is on track to test the October 21 low near 0.9705 and then the October 13 low near 0.9635.”

“With a big chunk of the eurozone already tipping into recession, can the ECB hike as aggressively as anticipated? It appears that the market is starting to have it doubts.”

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Friday, October 7, 2022

USD Index Price Analysis: Another drop to 110.00 stays in the pipeline



DXY recedes modestly to the 112.00 region on Friday.

Losses could gather pace and attempt another test of 110.00.

DXY comes under some tepid selling pressure after two consecutive sessions with gains at the end of the week.


The index faces an immediate risk with the release of the Nonfarm Payrolls. A negative surprise could encourage sellers to return to the market and drag the dollar to the area of recent lows in the proximity of the 110.00 mark.

On the upside, there is still scope for a move to the 2022 high near 114.80 (September 28).


The prospects for extra gains in the dollar should remain unchanged as long as the index trades above the 7-month support line near 107.50.


In the longer run, DXY is expected to maintain its constructive stance while above the 200-day SMA at 102.84.

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Thursday, July 28, 2022

When is the Advance US Q2 GDP report and how could it affect EUR/USD?



US Q2 GDP Overview

Thursday's economic docket highlights the release of the Advance second-quarter US GDP report, at 12:30 GMT. Having contracted by 1.6% in the previous quarter, the world's largest economy is expected to return to growth and narrowly avoided a so-called 'technical' recession. GDP likely grew at a meagre 0.3% annualized pace during the April-June period, though some economists anticipate a drop in activity for the second successive quarter.


According to Valeria Bednarik, Chief Analyst at FXStreet, “Macroeconomic data points to heightened downward risks for the economy, particularly figures linked to the last half of the quarter, as spending retreated sharply.”

How Could it Affect EUR/USD?

Ahead of the key release, the US dollar stages a goodish rebound from its lowest level since July 6 touched earlier this Thursday. A stronger GDP print would be enough to reinforce expectations that the Fed would still hike 50 bps at each meeting in the remainder of this year. This would be enough to provide a fresh lift to the greenback and force the EUR/USD pair to prolong its intraday retracement slide from the 1.0235 region.


Conversely, a weaker reading would add to growing market worries about an economic downturn. This might continue to weigh on investors' sentiment and offer support to the safe-haven greenback. Apart from this, concerns about an energy crisis in the Eurozone suggest that the path of least resistance for the EUR/USD pair is to the downside.


Eren Sengezer, Editor FXStreet, outlined important technical levels to trade the EUR/USD pair: “The Fibonacci 38.2% retracement level of the latest downtrend forms strong resistance at 1.0230, which is also the upper limit of the 10-day-old trading range. With a four-hour close above that level, the pair could target 1.0300 (psychological level, Fibonacci 50% retracement) and 1.0320 (200-period SMA on the four-hour chart).”


“On the downside, 1.0200 (50-period SMA, psychological level) aligns as initial support before 1.0150 (Fibonacci 23.6% retracement, 100-period SMA) and 1.0100 (psychological level, static level),” Eren added further.


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Monday, July 25, 2022

EUR/USD Price Analysis: Further consolidation appears in store



EUR/USD remains within a consolidative mood near 1.0250.

Extra side-lined trade appears favoured in the near term.

EUR/USD fades the initial pessimism and refocuses on the upper end of the recent range near 1.0260.


The current consolidative mood carries the potential to extend further, at least until the FOMC meeting due later in the week. The upside should remain limited by the weekly high around 1.0280, while the low-1.0100s are expected to hold the downside for the time being.


In the meantime, the pair is expected to remain under downside pressure while below the 5-month support line around 1.0490.


In the longer run, the pair’s bearish view is expected to prevail as long as it trades below the 200-day SMA at 1.0991.

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Monday, June 13, 2022

US dollar to weaken over short-term on a 50 bps hike from the Fed – Nordea

Economists at Nordea believe the Federal Reserve will hike by 50 bps, but uncertainty is very high. If they are right, the USD could weaken in favour of other G10 currencies.

USD could strengthen on a 75 bps hike from the Fed 

“We believe the Fed will hike by 50 bps this week but we admit that the uncertainty is very high. If we are right, we will likely see the USD weaken again in favour of other G10 currencies such as EUR, NOK, SEK, DKK, etc over the short-term. 

“If we are wrong, the USD could strengthen somewhat more against the rest of G10 currencies.”

“From a technical standpoint, the USD is close to being overbought against most G10 currencies currently.”

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Tuesday, June 7, 2022

EUR/USD looks offered and drops to 3-day lows near 1.0660



EUR/USD loses further ground and revisits the 1.0660 region.

The greenback extends the bid bias despite lower yields.

Germany Construction PMI eased to 45.4 in May.

Sellers appear well in control of the sentiment around the European currency and drag EUR/USD back to the 1.0660 zone on Tuesday.


EUR/USD in multi-day lows

EUR/USD sheds ground for the third session in a row on Tuesday and pushes further south of the 1.0700 mark in the first half of the week, always in response to the selling pressure in the risk-associated universe.


Also reflecting the offered bias in the risk complex, US and German yields recede from recent tops, although they manage well to keep the trade in the upper end of the range.


In the domestic calendar, German Factory Orders contracted at a monthly 2.7% in April and the Construction PMI eased a tad to 45.4 in May. Across the Atlantic, Balance of Trade results and the Consumer Credit Change figures are due later in the NA session.

What to look for around EUR

EUR/USD continues to lose momentum and extends further the rejection from peaks beyond the 1.0700 mark in past sessions.


The pair’s recent multi-week recovery has been on the back of supportive ECB-speak, which continued to point at an initial rate hike as soon as in July, while the consensus view that the bond-purchase programme should end at some point in early Q3 has also lent legs to the European currency.


However, EUR/USD is still far away from exiting the woods and it is expected to remain at the mercy of dollar dynamics, geopolitical concerns and the Fed-ECB divergence, while higher German yields, persistent elevated inflation in the euro area and a decent pace of the economic recovery in the region are also supportive of an improvement in the mood around the euro.


Key events in the euro area this week: Germany Construction PMI (Tuesday) – Advanced EMU Q1 GDP Growth Rate (Wednesday) – ECB Interest Rate Decision (Thursday).


Eminent issues on the back boiler: Speculation of the start of the hiking cycle by the ECB as soon as this summer. Asymmetric economic recovery post-pandemic in the euro bloc. Impact of the war in Ukraine on the region’s growth prospects.


EUR/USD levels to watch

So far, spot is retreating 0.09% at 1.0686 and a breach of 1.0627 (monthly low June 1) would target 1.0532 (low May 20) en route to 1.0459 (low May 18). On the upside, the next resistance aligns at 1.0786 (monthly high May 30) seconded by 1.0936 (weekly high April 21) and finally 1.0945 (100-day SMA).

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Tuesday, May 17, 2022

GBP/USD rallies to near two-week high, eyeing 1.2500 ahead of US data/Fed's Powell


A combination of factors prompted aggressive short-covering around GBP/USD on Tuesday.

The British pound drew support from better-than-expected domestic employment figures.

A turnaround in the risk sentiment undermined the safe-haven USD and remained supportive.

Investors now eye the US Retail Sales for a fresh impetus ahead of Fed Chair Powell’s remarks.

The GBP/USD pair added to its strong intraday gains and shot to a nearly two-week high, around the 1.2480 region during the first half of the European session.


The British pound strengthened across the board on Tuesday after the UK Office for National Statistics reported that the number of people claiming unemployment-related benefits dropped by 56.9K in April. This was well below expectations for a fall by 38.8 and the 46.9K decline reported in the previous month. Adding to this, the ILO Unemployment Rate in the UK edged lower to 3.7% in three months to March from 3.8% prior.


Apart from this, the ongoing US dollar profit-taking slide from a two-decade high assisted the GBP/USD pair to build on its recent bounce from the 1.2155 region, or the lowest level since September 2020. Spot prices gained traction for the third successive day, taking along some short-term trading stops placed around the 1.2400 round-figure mark. The subsequent strength might have already set the stage for additional near-term gains.

That said, the UK-EU impasse over the Northern Ireland protocol could act as a headwind for sterling. UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss will set out how the government plans to change the rules on goods moving between Britain and Northern Ireland and how it could override parts of the Brexit deal. Apart from this, the Bank of England's warning that the UK economy will slide into recession this year might cap gains for the GBP/USD pair.


Traders might also be reluctant to place aggressive bets and prefer to wait on the sidelines ahead of the key US macro data and Fed Chair Jerome Powell's appearance later this Tuesday. The US economic docket highlights the release of monthly Retail Sales figures. Meanwhile, Powell's remarks will be scrutinized for clues about the possibility of a 75 bps rate hike in June, which will influence the USD and provide a fresh impetus to the GBP/USD pair.

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Friday, April 29, 2022

Eurozone Economy Grew 0.2% in 1Q; France Stagnates, Germany Avoids Recession



The Eurozone economy grew by 0.2% in the first three months of the year, but its post-pandemic growth weakened sharply toward the end of the period under pressure from the war in Ukraine and record-high inflation.


Eurostat's figures, released on Friday, mean that gross domestic product was up 5.0% from a year earlier, a time when the region's economy was still laboring under the worst of the effects from the pandemic. 


Both figures were largely in line with expectations, but masked some big divergences from consensus among some of the region's biggest member states. French GDP undershot expectations to stagnate in the quarter, while German GDP rose 0.2%, defying fears that it would register a second straight quarter of negative growth, thanks to strong investment spending.


At the same time, Eurostat said that inflation in the Eurozone hit a new record high since the creation of the single currency. Consumer prices rose 7.5% in April, up from 7.4% in March. While the slower rise in the headline rate suggests that an absolute peak for inflation may be near, underlying price pressures remained strong: core CPI rose by over 1% for the second month running, and Eurostat's harmonized measure of annual inflation excluding food and energy accelerated far more than forecast to 3.9% from 3.2% last month.


The euro rose by around half a cent against the dollar in the course of the morning as national GDP data were published in advance of the Eurozone numbers. By 5:20 AM ET (0920 GMT), it was at $1.0576, up 0.8% on the day. A bounce in Chinese assets in response to promises of more economic policy support from Beijing had also helped sentiment toward the euro and to risk assets more broadly.


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Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Dollar Gains to Two-Year High on Safe Haven Flows

The U.S. dollar posted further gains in early European trade Wednesday, trading at two-year highs on safe haven flows as traders digested slowing global growth, raised geopolitical tensions, and the prospect of more tightening by the Federal Reserve.


At 3:15 AM ET (0715 GMT), the Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, traded 0.2% higher at 102.532, the strongest it has been since March 2020 and on course for its best month since 2015.



Russia announced plans to halt gas flows to Poland and Bulgaria from Wednesday amid a standoff over fuel payments, to the benefit of the safe haven dollar.


Russian President Vladimir Putin has decreed that payment from “unfriendly” buyers should be in rubles, helping support his country’s beleaguered currency, while the European Union has responded that would be a breach of sanctions.


This escalation of tensions has added to the reasons traders have chosen to hold the dollar, with strict COVID-19 lockdown in China likely to hit economic growth in the world’s second largest economy while the Federal Reserve is expected to hike interest rates by 50 basis points in May as it seeks to combat inflation at a four-decade high.


EUR/USD fell 0.2% to 1.0618, dropping to a five-year low, amid fears for Europe's energy security, while the weak GfK German consumer confidence index, projected to plunge to a historic low in May, also weighed.


“April has been nasty for the euro, falling over 300 points. The Ukraine war and the hawkish Fed have been a toxic mix for the euro, as investors have dumped the currency and flocked to the safe-haven U.S. dollar,” said Kenny Fisher, an analyst at brokerage OANDA.


USD/JPY rose 0.5% to 127.81, not far removed from its recent 20-year low with the Bank of Japan set to meet overnight.


This central bank has maintained a very accommodative monetary stance, in direct contrast to the hawkish Federal Reserve, but traders see the risk of policy changes to try and arrest the currency's recent weakness.


GBP/USD edged higher to 1.2577, falling to a fresh 21-month low as last week’s weak retail sales data prompted a rethink of the Bank of England’s tightening cycle.


“Tightening expectations for the 5 May BoE meeting have dropped backed to 29bp from 38bp early last week,” said analysts at ING, in a note.


USD/CNY edged lower to 6.5555, with the yuan helped by data showing Chinese industrial profit growth quickened in March, while AUD/USD rose 0.5% to 0.7159 after Australian consumer prices surged at their fastest annual pace in two decades, spurring rate hike speculation.

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Thursday, April 21, 2022

EUR/USD Price Analysis: Next target appears at 1.1000

EUR/USD extends the rebound to the 1.0940 region.

A move to the 1.1000 hurdle should not be ruled out.

EUR/USD’s upside momentum picks up extra pace beyond the 1.0900 yardstick on Thursday.


Further advance appears in store for the pair in the very near term with the immediate hurdle now at the psychological 1.0000 barrier. The surpass of the latter should put a test of the 55-day SMA, today at 1.1077, back on the radar.


While below the 200-day SMA, today at 1.1415, the outlook for the pair is expected to remain negative.

EUR/USD daily chart



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Thursday, April 14, 2022

EUR/USD Price Analysis: Extra pullbacks seen below 1.080


EUR/USD fades the pre-ECB uptick to the 1.0920 zone on Thursday.

Recent lows around 1.0800 emerge as the next contention area.

In light of the ongoing price action, extra losses in the pair remain in the pipeline in the short-term horizon. Against that, a break below the so far monthly low at 1.0808 (April 14 should pave the way for a quick visit to the 2022 low at 1.0805 (March 7) before the May 2020 low at 1.0766 (May 7).


While below the 200-day SMA, today at 1.1440, the outlook for the pair is expected to remain negative. 

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Thursday, April 7, 2022

GBP/JPY consolidates in a range around 162.00 mark, downside remains cushioned

GBP/JPY struggled to capitalize on its modest intraday gains back closer to over a one-week high.

The cautious market mood underpinned the safe-haven JPY and capped the upside for the cross.

Subdued USD demand benefitted the GBP and extended some support, at least for the time being.

The GBP/JPY cross surrendered its modest intraday gains and was last seen trading in the neutral territory, around the 161.80-161.75 region.


The cross attracted some dip-buying near the 161.40 area on Thursday and climbed back closer to over a one-week high touched the previous day, though the uptick lacked bullish conviction. The European equity markets recovered from the overnight selloff, which undermined the safe-haven Japanese yen and extended some support to the GBP/JPY cross.

Apart from this, comments from Bank of Japan board member Asahi Noguchi, saying that the central bank must stick to its ultra-easy policy despite rising inflationary pressures, also weighed on the JPY. On the other hand, some cross-driven strength stemming from the fall in the EUR/GBP cross benefitted sterling amid subdued US dollar price action.

The combination of factors did provide an intraday lift to the GBP/JPY cross, through the prevalent cautious market mood kept a lid on any meaningful upside, at least for the time being. The market sentiment remains fragile amid fading hopes for a diplomatic solution to end the war in Ukraine and the prospect of more Western sanctions on Russia.

Hence, the focus will remain on new developments surrounding the Russia-Ukraine saga amid absent relevant market moving economic releases from the UK on Thursday. The incoming geopolitical headlines would influence the risk sentiment, which, in turn, will drive demand for safe-haven assets, including the JPY, and provide impetus to the GBP/JPY cross.

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USD Index Price Analysis: A drop to the 200-day SMA cannot be ruled out DXY breaks below the 106.00 support to clinch new multi-month lows. ...