Eurgbplong
⁉️ EURGBP - Market AnalysisHello traders!
⁉️This is my analysis on EURGBP .
Here we are in a bullish market structure, so I am looking only for longs. I expect price to continue the retracement to fill the imbalances below and then to reject from trendline.
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EurGbp- Will the pair rise to 0.9?Last week was marked by a very important break for EurGbp, the break above 0.87 resistance, a level that helps for one and a half years.
Since April 2021 the pair has drawn an inverted H&S on our chart giving us a high probability of a genuine break.
Dips towards 0.87, now support, should be bought with a target above 0.9 resistance.
EURGBP Forecast: Will the price rally? EURO POUND NEWS AND ANALYSIS
Recent developments in the UK are pushing the price up. The ECB Press conference might say otherwise at 14:45.
Price is forming a bullish head and shoulder pattern on the monthly that's accompanied by a double bottom on the weekly time frame.
Fundamental Outlook
The pound has been rallying up lately. Market seems to be reacting to the appointment of the new UK's prime minister - Liz Truss, as a leader of the ruling conservative party. The campaign that was ran by Truss had a significant impact because it promised to support households through this time of soaring inflation with tax breaks cited as one of the mechanisms of easing the current cost of living crisis. In addition, Truss plans to assist in the region of 40 billion pounds to business with rising energy costs. Therefore, the promises of relief to households and businesses is likely to support the pound in the short-run.
Monthly Technical Outlook
As you can see, the current price is fully forming the head and shoulder pattern, bullish break and retesting the the 50 and 21 moving average to currently trying to do the same on the Monthly Half a Bat Neckline. If the price does that and continues to rally to break and retest the Monthly H&S Neckline together with bullish crossed short-term moving averages, that will signal an upcoming 3 level uptrend. But if the price bounces off the Monthly H&S Neckline with a bearish reversal pattern that leads the price to bearish break and retest the 50 and 8 moving average, that will signal an upcoming drop. With that said, we're looking at an either or situation.
Weekly Technical Outlook
In the weekly chart image, we have the price currently bullish running in the double bottoms 1st level. The pattern expects the 2nd and 3rd levels to be formed. That will happen if the price continues to bullish break and retest the monthly key levels that are in line with the weekly ones (as you can see). If the price bounces off the Monthly H&S Neckline, that will signal a rejection of both the monthly and weekly signal, which will likely drop the price for the monthly's bearish trend.
That's it for today. I hope you found value in this trade idea. If you have a different concept in mind, feel free to share in the comments section, I'd love to know your thoughts!
Stay Blessed,
Sphatrades.
EURGBP Daily Trading Idea: SnR/SnD/FibMy swing trading setup on EURGBP
At the moment no trades are taken yet as price is moving in the range between the broken supply zone and the resistance.
Waiting for price action to show where the price is going next.
Divergence signals that I look for potential short @ 0.883:
1) RSI: Lower high
2) Awesome Oscillator: Lower High
3) Price action: If candles close with bearish engulfing or any reversal candles (eg: Hanging Man/Shooting Star etc)
EUR/GBP Hit Final Target +250 Pips 0 Drawdown , Happy WeekendThis Is An Educational + Analytic Content That Will Teach Why And How To Enter A Trade
Make Sure You Watch The Price Action Closely In Each Analysis As This Is A Very Important Part Of Our Method
Disclaimer : This Analysis Can Change At Anytime Without Notice And It Is Only For The Purpose Of Assisting Traders To Make Independent Investments Decisions.
EUR/GBP Running In 140 Pips 0Drawdown As Usual ,New Entry Added This Is An Educational + Analytic Content That Will Teach Why And How To Enter A Trade
Make Sure You Watch The Price Action Closely In Each Analysis As This Is A Very Important Part Of Our Method
Disclaimer : This Analysis Can Change At Anytime Without Notice And It Is Only For The Purpose Of Assisting Traders To Make Independent Investments Decisions.
EUR/GBP Running In 90 Pips 0Drawdown , Important Update NowThis Is An Educational + Analytic Content That Will Teach Why And How To Enter A Trade
Make Sure You Watch The Price Action Closely In Each Analysis As This Is A Very Important Part Of Our Method
Disclaimer : This Analysis Can Change At Anytime Without Notice And It Is Only For The Purpose Of Assisting Traders To Make Independent Investments Decisions.
EUR/GBP Running In 40 Pips 0Drawdown , New Update Now This Is An Educational + Analytic Content That Will Teach Why And How To Enter A Trade
Make Sure You Watch The Price Action Closely In Each Analysis As This Is A Very Important Part Of Our Method
Disclaimer : This Analysis Can Change At Anytime Without Notice And It Is Only For The Purpose Of Assisting Traders To Make Independent Investments Decisions.
GBP traders - the BoE facing the toughest job of any G10 CBAsk a trader who is the most influential central bank, and the answer should unequivocally be the Federal Reserve. Then, ask the same traders which central bank has the hardest job in setting policy, and you’ll most likely hear them say “the ECB” – They have to set policy for 19 different countries, where a one-size fits all model is fraught with challenges – all the while, the Eurozone is most exposed to the Ukraine conflict, has very high supply-side driven inflation and a looming energy crisis.
While sympathetic to this argument, I would argue it’s the Bank of England (BoE) that is most challenged – partly because the likely Conservative party leader, Liz Truss, is threatening an overhaul of the bank's policy mandate, but because of the sheer lack of confidence held in their forecasting ability. At this very moment, I’d argue that few other central banks even close, certainly in G10/DM circles, to the distribution of potential economic scenarios faced by the BoE – if you have zero confidence in your forecasting ability, then you’re really making policy up on the fly and the currency should wear sufficient risk premium.
The UK to see 20%+ inflation?
This week Citigroup caused shockwaves through the economics circles with forecasts that UK CPI and RPI inflation could reach 18% and 21% respectively in Q1 23. It raises the prospect that other economists revise their inflation calls soon as well - the BoE is forecasting inflation to reach 13%, but their forecasts may again need to be reviewed, as they tend to be slower moving than private sector economists.
We know UK headline inflation has been largely driven by supply side issues, notably by an incredible rise in gas, electricity, and food prices. Rate hikes are very much on the cards, and the BoE will almost certainly lift the bank rates by 50bp to 2.25% on 15 Sept, but this will do almost nothing to alter the trajectory of inflation – it’s all heading to a sizeable squeeze in domestic demand which should negatively impact the UK corporate landscape, and invariably lead to deeper negative real wages, layoffs, and higher unemployment rates.
One could also see a world where the UK economy heads to a recession, slack builds in the economy and various measures of medium-and longer-term inflation expectations fall – subsequently, the BoE cut rates in late 2023/24 – a vision the market currently shares with 60bp of cuts priced into UK (tradeable) interest rate curve for 2024. However, if UK CPI does indeed move into the high teens, and the BoE sees entrenched ‘sticky’ inflation, then one could feasibly see a world where the BoE hike the bank rate to 5% to 6%, and not the 4% that the market currently discounts as the ‘terminal’ rate.
Again, it plays into the idea that the playbook of outcomes is so incredibly diverse, and this is a massive headache for the BoE, as well as those trying to position investment portfolios.
Ofgem price caps in full focus
Looking at the unfolding inflation dynamics – one piece of news that is being watched closely this week will be the Ofgem price caps for October – this intel essentially details the cap that suppliers can charge households (effective 1 October) and is the poster child of modern-day inflation. Estimates for the Ofgem cap currently sit around £3600, up from £1971 in April. However, this figure is then expected to increase by 26% in January 2023 and 27% in April 2023 – this will genuinely hurt households and businesses.
On a political note, Liz Truss is looking to implement fiscal measures to the tune of £30b (c.1.4% of GDP) to address the cost-of-living crisis, with the suspension of the Green Levy and cuts on VAT on household energy bills. However, these measures will be no panacea. They may support growth but will be deficit funded and require the UK Treasury to consider gilt issuance, which may raise bond yields and broad borrowing costs, especially given the backdrop of BoE QT – in this case, a GBP negative.
Looking more broadly at GBP fundamentals – Personal consumption is in decline; business investment is weak, and UK GDP is deteriorating with Q2 GDP -0.1% QoQ - it seems likely this will only get worse as higher inflation breaks the social fabric, cementing a negative feedback loop to consumers spending behaviours.
The UK's current account is falling away as trade is being affected by Brexit and lacklustre external demand – with the UK's biggest trading partner - Europe - also facing a tough winter and a protracted economic slowdown. The UK’s capital account is also deteriorating, so the GBP is facing rising balance of payments concerns
GBPUSD to 1.1500?
In essence, the UK is facing a number of economic considerations which suggest significant GBP headwinds – from where I sit, we can like the GBP from a rising rates perspective, but when UK real rates are likely headed lower, relative expected growth and investment attraction favour the US, While forecasts offer traders no edge, GBPUSD seems destined for 1.1500 over time, perhaps lower. But one thing is clear, the BoE have their work cut out.
EUR/GBP Finally Broke D Trend Line , Time To Take Off ? This Is An Educational + Analytic Content That Will Teach Why And How To Enter A Trade
Make Sure You Watch The Price Action Closely In Each Analysis As This Is A Very Important Part Of Our Method
Disclaimer : This Analysis Can Change At Anytime Without Notice And It Is Only For The Purpose Of Assisting Traders To Make Independent Investments Decisions.