Results for eur/usd
20 articles with this tag name
  • For readers of the Daily Currency Focus, it should be no surprise that the dollar has continued to weaken. On Wednesday, we said that the actions by the Federal Reserve have cemented the downtrend in the U.S. dollar. Given how currency traders have responded to previous Quantitative Easing threats and announcements, the EUR/USD could realistically hit 1.40 (see charts). Although equities have given back its gains and bond yields have rallied, the moves in the currency and commodity markets indicate that the Fed’s actions will have a lasting impact on the financial markets. As we look forward to more dollar weakness, it is worthwhile to consider how a weaker dollar impacts the global economy.
  • The outbreak of swine flu triggered a wave of risk aversion in Asian currency trade today with the region especially concerned given its recent history with SARS virus. Health officials were on alert across the globe against the pandemic with Mexico acting as the epicenter of the disease while cases of the outbreak were confirmed in US and Canada.
  • The big story in the financial markets today was not the improvements in economic data, but the improvement in earnings. The health of the financial sector is critical to the recovery in the U.S. economy and therefore investors are keeping a particularly close eye on the reports from the banking sector. In order for the global economy to have any chance of recovering, banks need to stabilize and start turning a profit so they will feel comfortable enough to lend. Therefore the better than expected results from Wells Fargo has been received positively by the equity and currency markets. The U.S. dollar sold off against the commodity currencies and rallied against the Japanese Yen. The dollar also gained strength against the euro and British pound, which is not in line with the improvement in risk appetite because of euro and pound specific reasons that we will discuss further in the respective sections.
  • The EUR/USD is on a tear, having rallied more than 600 pips or 5 percent over the past 24 hours.
    Tags: eur/usd
  • With U.S. equities rising more than 5.5 percent today, one would expect the improvement in risk appetite to drive the U.S. dollar lower against all of the major currencies. Unfortunately we did not see a broad based sell-off in the U.S. dollar. The greenback only weakened against the Euro and commodity currencies because investors continued to bail out of British pounds and Swiss Francs. It is also interesting that the EUR/USD is well off its highs indicating that the market’s appetite for dollars has not waned dramatically. The catalysts for today’s rally are not convincing and the moves in the currency market are fizzling, which suggests that we have witnessed nothing more than a bear market rally.
  • The two biggest event risks for currency traders over the next 24 hours are the Bank of England and European Central Bank interest rate decisions.
  • Currencies and equities have strengthened across the board suggesting that risk appetite may be improving. The dollar, which has been a refuge for safe haven flows, fell against all of the major currencies except for the Japanese Yen. In fact, the rally in USD/JPY has been voracious with the currency pair rising 2.5 percent to an 11 week high. The move today has been driven by a variety of factors, none of which in our opinion are meaningful enough to sustain the rally.
  • eurusd-intraday-technicals-point-to-12785-support
    Further losses anticipated for the EUR/USD....
  • how-will-obamas-plan-impact-intraday-technical-opportunities
    An update to this morning's technical report as wicked volatility follows Geithner's Financial Stimulus Plan roll-out...
  • This morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that January was another month of massive job losses. For the third time in a row, more than 500k Americans lost their jobs. The market was looking for payrolls to drop by 540k, but instead they fell by a whopping 598k (Instant Insight on January Non-Farm Payrolls). Yet, currencies and equities traded like non-farm payrolls increased rather than decreased but this baffling response to a very negative number can be easily explained by the prospect of help from Washington.
  • On Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics is expected to tell us that US employers fired another 500k people in the month of January. Surprisingly enough currencies and equities are trading higher ahead of the non-farm payrolls report which suggests that traders are not afraid of a bad number. Everyone knows that the US economy is very weak and major job losses will continue. Since traders are becoming immune to bad data, it may take job losses in the area of 600k to spook them (January Non-Farm Payrolls Preview). Instead, traders are looking beyond Friday’s non-farm payrolls report to the Monday, February 9th speech by US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. According to a Treasury official, Geithner is expected to unveil a bank rescue plan next week. This is one of the few things that could strike a meaningful recovery in the currency and equity markets. If traders deem Geithner’s plan as satisfactory, we could see a further recovery in the financial markets despite the fact that the US economy will get worse before it gets better.
  • Over the past 6 months, being long US dollars has been one of the best trades in the currency market but as the dollar extends its gains, many traders wonder how much further it can rise. In the currency market, trends can last much longer than anyone would normally anticipate especially if it is driven by fear. As humans, we run from uncertainty and not towards it. Risk aversion has been pushing investors into the safety of the US dollar and out of higher yielding currencies. When Main Street reads in the papers tomorrow about the slowest pace of economic growth in 26 years, their shock could turn into more selling. Next week, we also have the US non-farm payrolls report due for release. A sour mood could hang over the markets for most of the week as traders fear that another 500k jobs were lost in the month of January. The only thing that could improve risk appetite and give investors a reason to cheer would be if the Senate passes President Obama’s economic stimulus package.
  • The US dollar is stronger across the board today as risk aversion returns to the market. Like Florida weather, where it can be hot one day and cold the next but warm most of the time, we can occasionally see an improvement in the market’s risk appetite but the bias is still towards risk aversion. Traders have quickly realized that nothing new came out of the Fed’s monetary policy meeting yesterday and until we have another major announcement from the US government, currencies will be vulnerable to negative US economic data, earnings report and developments abroad.
  • The Federal Reserve is currently holding a two day monetary policy meeting and it will be interesting to see whether they are desperate enough to introduce radical programs that can incite the enthusiasm of investors. With interest rates virtually at zero, a rate cut is not expected, but the central bank is under pressure to take further action. So far, their effort which includes 500bp of easing has helped to prevent the recession from turning into a depression but it has yet to stabilize the economy. The latest string of economic data indicates that the US economy is still on a downtrend and headed lower. The FOMC rate decision tomorrow could be a nonevent for the US dollar, but if the Federal Reserve is desperate enough, they still have the power to surprise the markets.
  • For the first time since August 2007, the Federal Reserve is not expected to change interest rates. With the fed funds rate now set to a target range of 0 to 0.25 percent, the Federal Reserve has maxed out on their most conventional monetary policy tool. Although they still have different ways of adding liquidity to the financial system and stimulating the economy, what was once the second most market moving event risk for the foreign exchange market could become a non-event. Going forward, traders may have the same disregard for FOMC rate decisions as they do for Bank of Japan meetings. The only way for Wednesday’s FOMC rate decision to hurt the dollar would be if the central bank announces that they will be purchasing long term US Treasuries in size or if they add more ingredients to their alphabet soup of new programs. There is nothing to support the dollar on the upside as the Fed is not expected to start talking about raising interest rates.
  • In more than 40 years, we have never seen US consumers this pessimistic. The Conference Board's report on consumer confidence fell to 37.7, the lowest level on record.
  • The US dollar strengthened across the board today following better than expected economic data and more clarity from the Federal Reserve on their plans to stimulate the economy going forward. However the strength of the greenback could be fleeting particularly against the Japanese Yen as the upside surprises in US data masks underlying weakness. The December retail sales report is due for release tomorrow. Even though there is a chance that we may see an upside surprise, consumer spending is still expected to be negative for the sixth consecutive month.
  • It is a new trading week and growing doubt about the global economy has seeped through the financial markets once again. For the foreign exchange market, we are seeing broad based liquidation or weakness in all of the major currency pairs. The concerns are not unique to the US economy which is why we have not seen any consistent behavior in the US dollar. The greenback weakened against the Japanese Yen but it rallied against the Euro, British pound and the commodity currencies. For currency traders who simply have a view on the US economy and nothing else, the price action of USD/JPY has been best aligned with the trend of the US economy. All of the other currency pairs are diluted by speculation about upcoming interest rate decisions and commodity prices.
  • The US dollar is selling off aggressively ahead of Friday’s non-farm payrolls report on the fear that for the second month in a row, job losses may have topped 500k. The recent moves in the currency and equity markets suggest that everyone expects a very weak labor market report. Although the consensus forecast is -520k, the whisper number is closer to -650k to -700k. Sentiment is strongly skewed in one direction which can be dangerous considering the fact that some of the leading indicators for non-farm payrolls call for a rebound. The Non-farm payrolls report is the most market moving release for the currency market and it should live up to its volatility inducing reputation.

TRADE RECOMMENDATIONS

  • Trades to Watch
  • Trades in Progress
currency recommendation
GBP/JPY
Medium term



Sell Sell at 139.2700
Stop at 140.39
Target at 137.58
GBP/JPY
Short term



Sell Sell at 139.1200
Stop at 139.82
Target at 137.51
GBP/USD
Medium term



Sell Sell at 1.5284
Stop at 1.5372
Target at 1.5151
There are currently no trades in progress.

QUOTEBOARD

  • Key Quotes
  • Currencies
  • Markets
  •  
  • current
  • high
  • low
 
  • EUR/USD
  • up
  • 1.3679
  • 1.3689
  • 1.3677
EUR/USD
5 min chart
  • GBP/USD
  • up
  • 1.5060
  • 1.5071
  • 1.5056
GBP/USD
5 min chart
  • USD/JPY
  • up
  • 90.63
  • 90.70
  • 90.60
USD/JPY
5 min chart
  • OIL
  • up
  • 82.29
  • 82.34
  • 82.24
CLJ0
5 min chart
  • GOLD
  • down
  • 1110.5
  • 1111.3
  • 1109.3
.GOLD
5 min chart
  • US Stocks
  • up
  • 10603
  • 10607
  • 10602
.US30
5 min chart
  • UK Stocks
  • up
  • 5628.0
  • 5631.5
  • 5627.5
.UK100
5 min chart
  • DEM Stocks
  • up
  • 5944.7
  • 5947.1
  • 5944.1
.DE30
5 min chart
  • JP Stocks
  • down
  • 10718
  • 10756
  • 10718
.JP225
5 min chart
  •  
  • current
  • high
  • low
 
  • EUR/USD
  • up
  • 1.3679
  • 1.3689
  • 1.3677
5 min chart
  • GBP/USD
  • up
  • 1.5060
  • 1.5071
  • 1.5056
  • USD/JPY
  • up
  • 90.63
  • 90.70
  • 90.60
  • USD/CHF
  • down
  • 1.0686
  • 1.0688
  • 1.0680
  • USD/CAD
  • down
  • 1.0242
  • 1.0245
  • 1.0233
  • AUD/USD
  • down
  • 0.9155
  • 0.9158
  • 0.9145
  • NZD/USD
  • down
  • 0.6992
  • 0.6997
  • 0.6985
  • USD/MXN
  • down
  • 12.5592
  • 12.5642
  • 12.5592
  • EUR/JPY
  • up
  • 123.97
  • 124.13
  • 123.91
  • GBP/JPY
  • up
  • 136.49
  • 136.67
  • 136.45
  •  
  • current
  • high
  • low
 
  • OIL
  • up
  • 82.29
  • 82.34
  • 82.24
5 min chart
  • GOLD
  • down
  • 1110.5
  • 1111.3
  • 1109.3
5 min chart
  • SILVER
  • up
  • 17.172
  • 17.218
  • 17.155
5 min chart
  • US500
  • up
  • 1149.6
  • 1150.4
  • 1149.4
5 min chart
  • UK Stocks
  • up
  • 5628.0
  • 5631.5
  • 5627.5
5 min chart
  • DEM Stocks
  • up
  • 5944.7
  • 5947.1
  • 5944.1
5 min chart
  • JP Stocks
  • down
  • 10718
  • 10756
  • 10718
5 min chart
  • AU Stocks
  • up
  • 4819.0
  • 4834.0
  • 4817.0
5 min chart
Data source: GFT

FX NEWS ALERTS

Receive daily forex commentary, technical analysis reports and potential strategies from Kathy Lien, Boris Schlossberg and their team of technical analysts.
  • Your first name:
  • Your last name:
Your email address:


close
Just a few more things...
Your city:
Your state / province:
Your country:
Your phone number:

Country Code Area / City Code Phone Number
close
One last step: choose your alerts.
Top stories in financial news, recent data releases and upcoming events to look out for, detailed technical analysis and potential strategies for major currency pairs. Four to five emails daily.

Analysis and key outcomes of recent market movements and news announcements with a forecast for upcoming market activity. Five to seven emails daily.

close
Thank You for Subscribing to FX News Alerts!
Based on your request, you will receive daily alerts and/or commentary via the email address you provided.
Please note that you may receive other information, including but not limited to free reports, promotional offers and other related communications.

CENTRAL BANK RATES


What is social bookmarking?

Social bookmarking refers to a method you can use to store, organize and manage bookmarks of web pages that interest you. These could be news articles, movie reviews, places you want to visit — any type of web page. The main advantage is that unlike traditional Internet bookmarks that are specific to one computer, you can use social bookmarking to add and access bookmarks from any computer with an Internet connection.

Another benefit of social bookmarking is the ability to share web pages with friends, family or anyone who has similar interests. Likewise, you can visit the pages that other social bookmarkers share with you.

All pages within our website include links to social bookmarking websites. These websites are free to use and require only a simple registration. This allows you to capture useful information you find on our website and share it with other traders like yourself. Your GFT bookmarks can become a reference if you have a question, want to revisit a concept that you found valuable or would like to tell someone about GFT.

Learn more and get started at Reddit, Digg, Del.icio.us, Google and Yahoo.