EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
In recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spreads from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. However, with a material energy crisis facing the EZ due to the war in Ukraine, the economic prospects look bleak. Even though growth data was surprisingly resilient in Q2, fresh recession fears ramped up as recent forward-looking growth data surprised materially lower for key members like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative has turned more bearish for the EUR until that improves.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus, and any possible de-escalation or cease fire in Ukraine would open up a lot of EUR upside. Also keep Italian politics in mind where any successful attempt by PM Draghi to stay in power should ease spread concerns. Stagflation fears are high, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data (Flash PMIs this week) could spark upside. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/ Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain, especially with Italian politics further exacerbating the problem. Thus, any insights or clarity regarding their new tool that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia resumes gas flows after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR upside.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remain in focus, any escalation in the Ukraine war that risks including NATO would be big negative risks. Also keep Italian politics in mind, where any triggers of general elections risk further spread concerns & pressure the EUR. Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if the ECB fail to calm fears or even walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Growth concerns continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data (Flash PMIs this week) will be in focus, where any major negative surprises could trigger downside. We've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations over the past three weeks, and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia keeps gas flows closed after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR downside.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. There are bearish and bullish factors in play right now though. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation, spread fragmentation and energy concerns acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. Recession risks does open up a narrative change for the EUR which will require markets to change their forecasts to reflect higher recession risks which should continue to weigh on the EUR.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >9%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.5% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). Even though lower STIR pricing should be negative for the USD, the growth concerns has sparked further risk off concerns and have seen safe haven flows into the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates. Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. The current high inflation has meant that bonds have not been sought as a safe haven with a strong stock-to-bond correlation, and this has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice. The bias remains bullish , but with stretched tactical and CFTC positioning we don’t want to chase the USD higher right now.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data ( S&P Flash PMI this week) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
The USD has been reacting as a safe haven with recent US data, but the worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad growth data could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at fresh cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close to prior highs which acted as local tops. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term, but finding strong enough bearish catalysts has been tricky recently. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for them to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD, but with inflation so high any dovish pivots seem unlikely for now.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. We do also want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, it could start to weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a ‘Fed Put’, but based on where inflation is sitting any pivot seems still a while away and as the safe haven of choice any further recession focused downside in risk assets will likely continue to prove supportive for the USD. In the short-term though, with positioning looking stretched, we prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalysts that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
Euro-dollar
Today’s Notable Sentiment ShiftsEUR – The single currency tumbled on Wednesday, with EURUSD falling back below the 1.02 handle due to rising tensions between Europe and Russia over the Nord Stream pipeline and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Russia’s warning to Europe of a potential 50% cut in daily gas flows through the Nord Stream pipeline is further “reinforcing worries that the euro zone economy is headed for a recession driven by an energy crunch,” according to Reuters.
EURUSD: Key Levels to Watch This Week 🇪🇺🇺🇸
Hey traders,
As I predicted, EURUSD is nicely recovering from 1 level.
Here are the key levels for you to watch:
Support 1: 0.9955 - 1.002 area
Resistance 1: 1.035 - 1.041 area
Resistance 2: falling trend line
Resistance 3: 1.058 - 1.065 area
Resistance 4: 1.075 - 1.08 area
Consider these structure for pullback / breakout trading.
❤️If you have any questions, please, ask me in the comment section.
Please, support my work with like, thank you!❤️
EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
In recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spreads from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. However, with a material energy crisis facing the EZ due to the war in Ukraine, the economic prospects look bleak. Even though growth data was surprisingly resilient in Q2, fresh recession fears ramped up as recent forward-looking growth data surprised materially lower for key members like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative has turned more bearish for the EUR until that improves.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus, and any possible de-escalation or cease fire in Ukraine would open up a lot of EUR upside. Also keep Italian politics in mind where any successful attempt by PM Draghi to stay in power should ease spread concerns. Stagflation fears are high, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data (Flash PMIs this week) could spark upside. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/ Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain, especially with Italian politics further exacerbating the problem. Thus, any insights or clarity regarding their new tool that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia resumes gas flows after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR upside.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remain in focus, any escalation in the Ukraine war that risks including NATO would be big negative risks. Also keep Italian politics in mind, where any triggers of general elections risk further spread concerns & pressure the EUR. Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if the ECB fail to calm fears or even walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Growth concerns continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data (Flash PMIs this week) will be in focus, where any major negative surprises could trigger downside. We've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations over the past three weeks, and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia keeps gas flows closed after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR downside.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. There are bearish and bullish factors in play right now though. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation, spread fragmentation and energy concerns acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. Recession risks does open up a narrative change for the EUR which will require markets to change their forecasts to reflect higher recession risks which should continue to weigh on the EUR.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >9%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.5% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). Even though lower STIR pricing should be negative for the USD, the growth concerns has sparked further risk off concerns and have seen safe haven flows into the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates. Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. The current high inflation has meant that bonds have not been sought as a safe haven with a strong stock-to-bond correlation, and this has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice. The bias remains bullish , but with stretched tactical and CFTC positioning we don’t want to chase the USD higher right now.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data ( S&P Flash PMI this week) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
The USD has been reacting as a safe haven with recent US data, but the worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad growth data could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at fresh cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close to prior highs which acted as local tops. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term, but finding strong enough bearish catalysts has been tricky recently. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for them to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD, but with inflation so high any dovish pivots seem unlikely for now.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. We do also want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, it could start to weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a ‘Fed Put’, but based on where inflation is sitting any pivot seems still a while away and as the safe haven of choice any further recession focused downside in risk assets will likely continue to prove supportive for the USD. In the short-term though, with positioning looking stretched, we prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalysts that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
Today’s Notable Sentiment ShiftsEUR – The euro strengthened for a third straight session on Tuesday, supported by a Reuters report that suggested the ECB is a bigger-than-expected 50 basis point hike at their meeting on Thursday, in an effort to tame record-high inflation.
Despite the EUR-positive report, Action Economic warns: “If Lagarde doesn’t deliver, or doesn’t deliver as much as traders are hoping for, parity is likely to be taken out lastingly.”
Additionally, HSBC argues: “this bounce is likely to prove short-lived and should provide better entry levels for short euro positions.”
EURUSD forming a short term bottom?EURUSD - Intraday - We look to Buy at 1.0082 (stop at 1.0012)
Prices have continued the bullish move higher and resulted in 2 consecutive positive days. This is positive for sentiment and the uptrend has potential to return. There is scope for mild selling at the open but losses should be limited. Support is located at 1.0080 and should stem dips to this area. We look to buy dips.
Our profit targets will be 1.0248 and 1.0300
Resistance: 1.0250 / 1.0600 / 1.1200
Support: 1.0800 / 0.9800 / 0.9400
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EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
In recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spreads from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. However, with a material energy crisis facing the EZ due to the war in Ukraine, the economic prospects look bleak. Even though growth data was surprisingly resilient in Q2, fresh recession fears ramped up as recent forward-looking growth data surprised materially lower for key members like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative has turned more bearish for the EUR until that improves.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus, and any possible de-escalation or cease fire in Ukraine would open up a lot of EUR upside. Also keep Italian politics in mind where any successful attempt by PM Draghi to stay in power should ease spread concerns. Stagflation fears are high, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data (Flash PMIs this week) could spark upside. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/ Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain, especially with Italian politics further exacerbating the problem. Thus, any insights or clarity regarding their new tool that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia resumes gas flows after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR upside.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remain in focus, any escalation in the Ukraine war that risks including NATO would be big negative risks. Also keep Italian politics in mind, where any triggers of general elections risk further spread concerns & pressure the EUR. Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if the ECB fail to calm fears or even walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Growth concerns continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data (Flash PMIs this week) will be in focus, where any major negative surprises could trigger downside. We've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations over the past three weeks, and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia keeps gas flows closed after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR downside.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. There are bearish and bullish factors in play right now though. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation, spread fragmentation and energy concerns acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. Recession risks does open up a narrative change for the EUR which will require markets to change their forecasts to reflect higher recession risks which should continue to weigh on the EUR.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >9%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.5% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). Even though lower STIR pricing should be negative for the USD, the growth concerns has sparked further risk off concerns and have seen safe haven flows into the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates. Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. The current high inflation has meant that bonds have not been sought as a safe haven with a strong stock-to-bond correlation, and this has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice. The bias remains bullish , but with stretched tactical and CFTC positioning we don’t want to chase the USD higher right now.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data ( S&P Flash PMI this week) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
The USD has been reacting as a safe haven with recent US data, but the worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad growth data could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at fresh cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close to prior highs which acted as local tops. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term, but finding strong enough bearish catalysts has been tricky recently. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for them to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD, but with inflation so high any dovish pivots seem unlikely for now.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. We do also want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, it could start to weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a ‘Fed Put’, but based on where inflation is sitting any pivot seems still a while away and as the safe haven of choice any further recession focused downside in risk assets will likely continue to prove supportive for the USD. In the short-term though, with positioning looking stretched, we prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalysts that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
In recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spreads from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. However, with a material energy crisis facing the EZ due to the war in Ukraine, the economic prospects look bleak. Even though growth data was surprisingly resilient in Q2, fresh recession fears ramped up as recent forward-looking growth data surprised materially lower for key members like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative has turned more bearish for the EUR until that improves.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus, and any possible de-escalation or cease fire in Ukraine would open up a lot of EUR upside. Also keep Italian politics in mind where any successful attempt by PM Draghi to stay in power should ease spread concerns. Stagflation fears are high, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data (Flash PMIs this week) could spark upside. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain, especially with Italian politics further exacerbating the problem. Thus, any insights or clarity regarding their new tool that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia resumes gas flows after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR upside.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remain in focus, any escalation in the Ukraine war that risks including NATO would be big negative risks. Also keep Italian politics in mind, where any triggers of general elections risk further spread concerns & pressure the EUR. Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if the ECB fail to calm fears or even walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Growth concerns continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data (Flash PMIs this week) will be in focus, where any major negative surprises could trigger downside. We've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations over the past three weeks, and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the EUR. Energy concerns are still in focus, which means watching the Nord Stream 1 pipeline closely, if Russia keeps gas flows closed after maintenance ends this week it could see EUR downside.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. There are bearish and bullish factors in play right now though. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation, spread fragmentation and energy concerns acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. Recession risks does open up a narrative change for the EUR which will require markets to change their forecasts to reflect higher recession risks which should continue to weigh on the EUR.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >9%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.5% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). Even though lower STIR pricing should be negative for the USD, the growth concerns has sparked further risk off concerns and have seen safe haven flows into the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates. Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. The current high inflation has meant that bonds have not been sought as a safe haven with a strong stock-to-bond correlation, and this has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice. The bias remains bullish , but with stretched tactical and CFTC positioning we don’t want to chase the USD higher right now.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data ( S&P Flash PMI this week) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
The USD has been reacting as a safe haven with recent US data, but the worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad growth data could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at fresh cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close to prior highs which acted as local tops. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term, but finding strong enough bearish catalysts has been tricky recently. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for them to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD, but with inflation so high any dovish pivots seem unlikely for now.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. We do also want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, it could start to weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a ‘Fed Put’, but based on where inflation is sitting any pivot seems still a while away and as the safe haven of choice any further recession focused downside in risk assets will likely continue to prove supportive for the USD. In the short-term though, with positioning looking stretched, we prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalysts that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
EUR/USD -15/07/2022-• Pair remains under bearish pressure
• After a successful break of the previous support level at 1.0340, parity level was reached
• Levels sub parity exposed as fundamentals still point to the downside
• A clear break of parity level exposes 0.96 figure
• The latter served as a support back in 2022 where the pair bottomed before starting a massive rally
• Will the 2002 scenario repeat itself in 2022 ?
• If that is the case, the next range would be 0.96-1.03
• Bulls need to bring the pair back above the 1.0340 level to turn the odds in their favor
• FED-ECB policy divergence is still in play as markets are now pricing in a 100 bps move at the next FOMC meeting.
EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
The EUR has had a bumpy ride over the past few months. At the onset of the war in Ukraine the EUR tumbled across the board. However, in recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spread from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. The bank did back up their attempts at calming fragmentation fears after an ad-hoc meeting by saying they are looking at introducing an additional ‘tool’ as quick as possible, so markets will be focused on any insights into what that tool might be. Even though growth data has been surprisingly resilient in the past few months, the recession fears ramped up as recent growth data surprised meaningfully lower for key members like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative has turned more bearish for the EUR until that improves.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus for the EUR, where any possible de-escalation or cease fire in the Ukraine war would open up a lot of appreciation for the EUR. Stagflation fears are high, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data (ZEW data this week) could spark upside. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/ Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain. Thus, any insights or clarity regarding their new tool that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the EUR.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if the ECB fail to calm fears or even walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Flash PMIs confirmed fears of possible recession. We expect growth concerns to continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data (ZEW data this week) will be in focus, where any major negative surprises could trigger downside. Watch those hike expectations. With a lot of froth recently baked into STIR markets for the ECB, we've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations over the past three weeks, and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the EUR.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. There are bearish and bullish factors in play right now though. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation and spread fragmentation acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. We do think the disappointing data does open up a narrative change for the EUR which will require more market participants to change their forecasts to reflect higher risk of recession, and that should weigh on the EUR.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >8%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.3% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). Even though lower STIRs should be negative for the USD, as a lot of hikes have been baked in, the growth concerns has sparked further risk off concerns and have seen safe haven flows into the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates. Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. The current high inflation has meant that bonds have not been sought as a safe haven with a strong stock-to-bond correlation, and this has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data (this week’s CPI , consumer sentiment and retail sales) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data this week could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
The USD has been reacting as a safe haven with recent US data, but the worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad growth data could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at fresh cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close prior highs which acted as local tops for the USD. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term, but finding strong enough bearish catalysts has been tricky recently. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for them to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD, but with inflation so high any dovish pivots seem unlikely for now.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. We do also want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, it could start to weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a ‘Fed Put’ but based on where inflation is sitting any pivot seems still a while away and as the safe haven of choice any further recession focused downside in risk assets will likely continue to prove supportive for the USD. In the short-term though, with positioning looking stretched, we prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalysts that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
Will the bulls continue to defend parity on EURUSD?EURUSD - Intraday - We look to Buy at 1.0004 (stop at 0.9936)
Short term bearish momentum has stalled. We look for a temporary move higher. Preferred trade is to buy on dips. Although the anticipated move higher is corrective, it does offer ample risk/reward today.
Our profit targets will be 1.0181 and 1.0250
Resistance: 1.0200 / 1.0780 / 1.1470
Support: 1.0000 / 0.9600 / 0.9200
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The trade ideas beyond this page are for informational purposes only and do not constitute investment advice or a solicitation to trade. This information is provided by Signal Centre, a third-party unaffiliated with OANDA, and is intended for general circulation only. OANDA does not guarantee the accuracy of this information and assumes no responsibilities for the information provided by the third party. The information does not take into account the specific investment objectives, financial situation, or particular needs of any particular person. You should take into account your specific investment objectives, financial situation, and particular needs before making a commitment to trade, including seeking advice from an independent financial adviser regarding the suitability of the investment, under a separate engagement, as you deem fit.
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EUR-USD Parity! Buy!
Hello,Traders!
EUR-USD is trading in a strong downtrend
And the pair has almost reached PARITY
So despite my strong bearish bias
I think that we will see at least a local rebound
From the 1.00000 level on EUR-USD
Because If thats not a round level
I don't know what is...
Buy!
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EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
The EUR has had a bumpy ride over the past few months. At the onset of the war in Ukraine the EUR tumbled across the board. However, in recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spread from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. The bank did back up their attempts at calming fragmentation fears after an ad-hoc meeting by saying they are looking at introducing an additional ‘tool’ as quick as possible, so markets will be focused on any insights into what that tool might be. Even though growth data has been surprisingly resilient in the past few months, the recession fears ramped up as recent growth data surprised meaningfully lower for key members like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative has turned more bearish for the EUR until that improves.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus for the EUR, where any possible de-escalation or cease fire in the Ukraine war would open up a lot of appreciation for the EUR. Stagflation fears are high, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data (ZEW data this week) could spark upside. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain. Thus, any insights or clarity regarding their new tool that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the EUR.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if the ECB fail to calm fears or even walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Flash PMIs confirmed fears of possible recession. We expect growth concerns to continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data (ZEW data this week) will be in focus, where any major negative surprises could trigger downside. Watch those hike expectations. With a lot of froth recently baked into STIR markets for the ECB, we've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations over the past three weeks, and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the EUR.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. There are bearish and bullish factors in play right now though. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation and spread fragmentation acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. We do think the disappointing data does open up a narrative change for the EUR which will require more market participants to change their forecasts to reflect higher risk of recession, and that should weigh on the EUR.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >8%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.3% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). Even though lower STIRs should be negative for the USD, as a lot of hikes have been baked in, the growth concerns has sparked further risk off concerns and have seen safe haven flows into the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates. Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. The current high inflation has meant that bonds have not been sought as a safe haven with a strong stock-to-bond correlation, and this has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data (this week’s CPI , consumer sentiment and retail sales) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data this week could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
The USD has been reacting as a safe haven with recent US data, but the worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad growth data could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at fresh cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close prior highs which acted as local tops for the USD. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term, but finding strong enough bearish catalysts has been tricky recently. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for them to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD, but with inflation so high any dovish pivots seem unlikely for now.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. We do also want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, it could start to weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a ‘Fed Put’ but based on where inflation is sitting any pivot seems still a while away and as the safe haven of choice any further recession focused downside in risk assets will likely continue to prove supportive for the USD. In the short-term though, with positioning looking stretched, we prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalysts that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
EUR USD - FUNDAMENTAL DRIVERSEUR
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: WEAK BEARISH
BASELINE
The EUR has had a bumpy ride over the past few months. At the onset of the war in Ukraine the EUR tumbled across the board. However, in recent weeks, the persistently high inflation has seen the ECB take a more hawkish turn with the bank confirming at least a 25bsp hike for July and possibility of a 50bsp hike in September. Despite the hawkish policy shift, the concerns over fragmentation in bond spreads (BTP\Bund) as well as fears of growing stagflation risks has seen the EUR struggle to hold onto any hawkish ECB momentum. The ECB did try to comfort spread concerns with promises of a new fragmentation tool, and even though it has kept spread from widening further, concerns remain. If the bank can convince markets that their new spread tool(s) can stop fragmentation it should be supportive for the EUR. The bank did back up their attempts at calming fragmentation fears after an ad-hoc meeting by saying they are looking at introducing an additional ‘tool’ as quick as possible, so markets will be focused on any insights into what that tool might be. Even though growth data has been surprisingly resilient in the past few months, the recession fears ramped up growth data continuing to surprise lower for key EU countries like Germany and France. Based on the forward-looking signals from leading indicators we think recession is likely in the EZ and that the narrative will turn more bearish for the EUR in the weeks ahead.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
Geopolitics remains a focus for the EUR, where any possible de-escalation or cease fire in the Ukraine war would open up a lot of appreciation for the EUR. Stagflation fears are high right now for the Eurozone, with growth expected to slow while inflation stays persistently high. Recent PMI data has invigorated recession fears, which means any materially better-than-expected growth data could spark some upside for the single currency. Even though the ECB’s recent communication has been enough to push BTP/Bund spreads from their recent highs the concerns remain. Thus, any insights, clarity regarding their new tools that convinces markets it can solve fragmentation should be supportive for the USD.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Spread fragmentation remains in focus, and if ECB speak in the week ahead fails to calm fears or walks back on recent hawkish comments it could trigger bearish reactions in the EUR. Flash PMIs confirmed growth risks in the EU is very much alive, we expect growth concerns to continue weighing on the EUR and means incoming growth data will be in focus. Watch those hike expectations. With a lot of froth recent baked into STIR markets for the ECB, we've seen a chunky repricing in hike expectations and any further lower repricing is expected to weigh on the single currency.
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the EUR has shifted to bearish with recent leading indicators pointing to a much faster economic slowdown than markets had previously expected. On the bearish side we have geopolitics, stagflation and spread fragmentation acting as negative drivers. But we also have hawkish ECB policy as a possible supportive driver. The disappointing data does open up a potential narrative change for EURGBP as well as the EURJPY so key pairs to keep on the radar in weeks ahead.
USD
FUNDAMENTAL OUTLOOK: BULLISH
BASELINE
Hawkish Fed policy remains a key driver for Dollar strength. With headline inflation >8%, the Fed has been pressured to tighten policy aggressively, hiking rates by 75bsp at their June meeting, and continuing with Quantitative Tightening. However, as a result of increasing fears of a growth slowdown (as evidenced by recent econ data), STIR markets have repriced lower, and now expects a terminal rate of 3.3% (versus >4% before the June FOMC meeting). As STIRs reprice lower, we are expecting that to act as a possible short-term negative driver for the USD. Even though lower STIRs should be negative for the USD, as a lot of hikes have been baked in, the growth concerns sparked further risk off concerns this past week, which supported the USD. The USD is usually inversely correlated to the global economy and trade, appreciating when growth & inflation slows and depreciates when growth & inflation accelerates (reflation). Further expectations of a cyclical slowdown and continued tight monetary policy expectations has seen investors shun risk assets and even bonds (usually considered a safe haven), and the USD has been a key benefactor of the rush to safety in recent weeks. Even though US bonds are considered safe havens, the current high inflation has seen a strong stock-to-bond correlation and has caused big bond outflows. With bonds not fulfilling its usual save haven role the USD has been the haven of choice.
POSSIBLE BULLISH SURPRISES
As aggressive Fed policy has been supporting the USD, any incoming data (this week’s ISM Services and NFP) that sparks further aggressive hike expectations, or additionally any comments from FOMC members that signals even more aggressive policy could trigger bullish reactions in the USD. As the cyclical outlook for the global economy is very bleak, and the USD is considered a safe haven, it means incoming data that exacerbates fears of recession and triggers a big rush to safety could trigger bullish USD reactions. Further outflows in US bonds means more USD safe haven appeal. So, watching key triggers for further upside in bond yields like rising commodity prices, rising inflation expectations and upside surprises in inflation data could also trigger further USD bullish reactions.
POSSIBLE BEARISH SURPRISES
Apart from this past week, the USD has reacted cyclically to incoming data which could suggest markets is shifting from safe haven focus to the rising risks of recession. The worse growth data gets, the higher likelihood of a ‘Fed Put’ in the months ahead. Thus, extremely bad ISM Services PMI or NFP data this week could trigger bearish reactions in the USD. Tactically the USD is trading at cycle highs, and aggregate CFTC positioning is close prior highs which acted as local tops for the USD. Thus, stretched positioning could make the USD vulnerable to mean reversion in the short-term. With a lot already priced for the Fed, it won’t take much for the Fed to disappoint markets on the dovish side. Any FOMC comments that suggests more concern about the economy than inflation could trigger bearish reactions in the USD
BIGGER PICTURE
The fundamental outlook for the USD remains bullish as long as the Fed stays aggressive and cyclical concerns put pressure on risk assets. But we do want to be mindful that lots has been priced for the USD, and as growth deteriorates, we are expecting that the weigh on the USD if markets start pricing in a higher likelihood of a less hawkish Fed due to higher recession risks. The opposite side to that though is that further concerns about the economy sees more safe haven inflows into the Dollar. Positioning is stretched, so we would prefer much deeper pullbacks for new med-term USD longs and would look for short-term catalyst that offer shorter bearish sentiment trades against the current strong bull trend.
Today’s Notable Sentiment ShiftsEUR – The euro tumbled to a new two-decade low on Wednesday as rising energy prices cost a long shadow over the euro zone’s economy.
Berenberg notes that “it is not only the threat of nondelivery (of gas) that is weighing on the euro. The already-high energy costs are a burden. Energy costs in Europe are many times higher than in the US.”
Additionally, Reuters notes that “analysts expect a quick resurgence in oil prices as supply tightness persists and as front-month spreads have held up despite Tuesday’s price fall.” While Goldman Sachs raised its natural gas price forecasts, saying that a complete restoration of Russian gas flows through Nordstream 1 was no longer the most likely scenario.
WHAT'S NEXT FOR EURUSD ??!Currently, the current trend of EURUSD is still bearish and it is expected to continue its decline until 0.99701 (one of the important support levels of the weekly chart).
Considering the liquidity formed around 1.04500 to 1.04900, the upward price return and filling of the formed liquidity gap is expected. In such a situation, we are looking for an unused and valid order block to enter the sell position.
EUR-USD Swing Analysis! Sell!
Hello,Traders!
EUR-USD is trading in a downtrend
And as you can see the pair is
Forming a bearish triangle
Which reinforces my bearish bias
And I think that after the pair
Goes back and forth inside the triangle
We will most likely see a breakout
And a move down towards the target below
Sell!
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