EUR/USD maintains the overall ruling bearish trend – FXStreet

FXStreet (Barcelona) - According to Valeria Bednarik, Chief Analyst at FXStreet, the EUR/USD pair maintains its bearish trend and might decline down to 1.1458 levels if the pair breaks below the key support at 1.1540, with sellers expected to cap the upside at 1.1680 region.

Key Quotes

“To add to the confusion, there was some kind of leak yesterday pre announcing 1,1 trillion EUR QE to take place between March 2015 and December 2016, making the EUR/USD pair swing between a 120 pips range in a matter of minutes. The same kind of volatility can be expected for today, with the market probably reacting first to the announcement itself, and later to Draghi’s words.”

“From a technical perspective, the pair maintains the overall ruling bearish trend, but that does not mean it can’t post a strong upward rally following the news.”

“The key resistance level, will be 1.1680, yesterday’s high, where sellers are expected to cap the upside. If stops above it get triggered, the rally may extend up to 1.1730/50 the next line in the sand.”

“To the downside, the key support to follow is 1.1540, with a break below it exposing the pair to a sharp decline down to 1.1458 this month low. If this last gives up, the next strong long term support stands at 1.1370 with the pair probably testing it during the upcoming sessions.”

RBA and RBNZ to join the easing club sooner than expected – Westpac

After the Bank of Canada’s surprise rate cut decision, many central banks including the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) may join in the easing club with possible rate cut, amid bleak global growth outlook this year coupled with widespread lower inflation prospects.
Mehr darüber lesen Previous

BoC rate surprise sends 10yr Canadian bonds to all time lows – DB

The Research Team at Deutsche Bank comments on yesterday’s surprise rate cut move by the Bank of Canada and shares how it affected the Canadian financial markets, and fuelled rate-hike expectations from other central banks.
Mehr darüber lesen Next