EUR/USD OUTLOOK:
- The euro falls sharply against the U.S. dollar, failing to sustain Monday’s breakout
- Weak economic data in Europe weighs on the common currency
- The ECB’s policy decision may set the tone for the euro later this week
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EUR/USD dropped sharply on Tuesday (-0.72% to 1.0590), relinquishing the gains it had garnered at the beginning of the week, and failing to maintain its bullish breakout, a sign that sellers have reasserted themselves after a short period of indecision.
In terms of price action catalysts, the common currency’s pullback was driven by disappointing eurozone data. By way of context, October German business activity, as reflected by the S&P Global composite PMI, fell further into contraction territory, raising concerns that a recession is underway in Europe’s largest economy.
GERMAN DATA
Source: DailyFX Economic Calendar
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Economic fragility could challenge market expectations that interest rates will remain at elevated levels for an extended period despite the European Central Bank’s rhetoric, creating the right conditions for regional bond yields to come under pressure.
We’ll gain more insights into policymakers’ thinking later this week when the European Central Bank announces its monetary policy decision. That said, the institution led by Christine Lagarde is seen hitting the pause button after having delivered 450 basis points of tightening over the past ten meetings.
Traders have already factored in this anticipated pause, so it is important to closely monitor guidance, placing a particular focus on President Lagarde’s communication. If the central bank chief signals that this isn’t just a short hiatus to gather more data to better assess the outlook but rather the conclusion of the hiking cycle, the euro could suffer large losses against the U.S. dollar.
On the other hand, should the guidance indicate the possibility of another rate increase in the future, perhaps in December, EUR/USD could find itself in a favorable position for a cautious rebound. However, any potential gains would likely be limited due to the prevailing interest rate differentials between the U.S. and Europe.
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Change in | Longs | Shorts | OI |
Daily | 20% | -24% | 0% |
Weekly | 3% | -17% | -4% |
EUR/USD TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
EUR/USD breached channel resistance early in the week, but the lack of follow-through on the upside and the subsequent reversal on Tuesday strongly implies that the initial breakout was, in fact, a fakeout.
We’ll have more clues about market dynamics in the coming days, but if prices extend lower following the bearish fakeout, the first floor to keep an eye on rests at 1.0575. Below that threshold, the focus is on trendline support at 1.0515, followed by this year’s lows just a touch below the 1.0500 handle.
Conversely, if buyers stage a comeback and drive the exchange rate higher, initial resistance appears at 1.0625, and 1.0675 thereafter, which corresponds to the 50-day simple moving average. On further strength, attention transitions to 1.0765, the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the July/October slump.
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