Get your week started on the right foot by understanding what levels are key and in play for the EURUSD. .
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
Get your week started on the right foot by understanding what levels are key and in play for the EURUSD. .
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
Prior to the rally on Thursday and Friday, the price did break below the 50% midpoint of the range since 2021 low on the daily chart opening the door for lower levels. That break also failed leading the snap back rally higher.
So for the week, the sellers had their chance, and the buyers had their chance. Both failed.
As a result, the price is back in a neutral area in the short term and waiting for the next shove.
Find out the key levels in play that will give traders clues in the new trading week.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
Monday should give traders some technical clues on who might win the next battle. The video will outline the key levels in play for the pair.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
However, the run to the upside on Friday ran into resistance against the high of a swing area on the daily chart, and a key retracement level on the hourly chart (the May trading range).
So as we head into the new week, there is key resistance on the top and key support on the downside as well and both the daily and hourly charts support those levels for different reasons.
Find out why those levels are key and where they are in this video.
Be aware. Be prepared.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
Get your week started on the right foot by understanding what levels are key and in play for the USDJPY. .
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
However, there is also key upside target resistance at 100-day MA and the 50% retracement of the 2023 trading range both at 0.9126. That level will be targeted next week and would need to be broken and stay broken, if the buyers are to take more control.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
The other thing of note from the daily chart is the convergence of the 100/200-day MAs. That is indicative of a non-trending longer-term market which could be a clue for a break outside of the range… soon. Non-trend transitions to trend.
The video will outline the levels that would keep the bearish bias and potentially lead to a break outside the up and down trading range in the USDCAD pair.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
Markets:
Non-farm payrolls beat the consensus estimate for an unprecedented 14th time and it beat it in a big way but
Non-farm payrolls beat the consensus estimate for an unprecedented 14th time and it beat it in a big way but the details told a different story and capped the dollar gains, at least initially. The unemployment rate jumped to 3.7% from 3.4%, wage growth was modest and the household survey showed a large drop in employment, particularly self-employment.
Initially, the dollar gave back almost all its gains but a second dollar bid arrived later as yields rose. Front end yields led the rise and my guess is that represents a dwindling possibility of a Fed overtightening error and a higher possibility of a soft landing.
For months now, the bond market hasn’t been concerned about inflation and has instead been pricing rates and growth. With the Fed set to skip a meeting and perhaps pause, there’s less of a chance of a yo-yo in policy where they hike too high and are forced to quickly cut.
Or at least that’s one way of looking at a market that’s been tough to explain over the turn of the month.
Dollar buying accelerated in the final hours of European trading with the euro, pound and yen falling hard.
The commodity currencies kept pace with the US dollar as stocks – and value stocks in particular – jumped.
Again, that could be an indication that markets are pricing in better global growth outcomes and along with that was the earlier report that China was planning some targeted real estate stimulus. Before NFP, the market was hesitant to react to that report. For me, the details (like cutting real estate commissions) are underwhelming but at least they show that Beijing is paying attention to its disappointing economy.
Later in the day, the loonie found some bids alongside oil as some OPEC reports about the possibility of a 1 mbpd cut on Sunday did the rounds. The market reaction in oil was tepid to those headlines and that shows it’s at least partly priced in already.
Have a great weekend.
This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.
The final numbers for the day are showing:
Year to date, the Russell 2000 and Dow Industrial Average have lagged the other broader and tech heavy indices. For the 2023 trading year
For the trading week, the snapshot shows:
A good day for all US indices and a good week as well.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.
On the
daily chart below, we can see that the big bullish wave in USDJPY stalled a few
days ago as we reached peak hawkishness and then got an unwind due to some Fed members hinting to a pause in
June. The bias remains bullish though as the price would need to break below
the upward trendline to change the trend and make the moving average to cross
downwards. Right now, we can see that USDJPY is approaching a nice support
level at 138.16 where we can also find the red 21 moving average.
USDJPY Technical
Analysis
On the 4
hour chart below, we can see that the price was already signalling weakness in
the bullish momentum as the price started to diverge with the
MACD into the
140 handle. Once we got the breakout of the rising channel and the moving
averages crossed to the downside, USDJPY just kept on falling also helped by yesterday’s
softness in the ISM Manufacturing PMI and Unit Labour Cost reports.
The
buyers are likely to lean on the 138.16 support where we can find the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement level.
However, if we get a break to the downside and the price falls more, we will
have an even stronger support near the 137 handle where we have the confluence of the
trendline and the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level.
On the 1
hour chart below, we can see that the short-term trend is bearish as we are
making lower lows and lower highs. As long as USDJPY doesn’t break above the
downward trendline, the bearish trend remains intact. So, as highlighted
before, we have 3 different entry opportunities for the buyers:
The
sellers, on the other hand, are likely to pile in at every breakout:
The spotlight today will be
on the US NFP report, with various potential scenarios that could unfold:
This article was written by ForexLive at www.forexlive.com.