Friday, July 24, 2015

Weekly Trading Forecast: Rate Decisions and GDP Figures to Ignite Volatility

Weekly Trading Forecast: Rate Decisions and GDP Figures to Ignite Volatility


Weekly Trading Forecast: Rate Decisions and GDP Figures to Ignite Volatility

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 06:39 PM PDT

This week’s docket is perfectly tailored to catalyze the market’s most explosive fundamental themes: monetary policy forecasts and the appetite for risk.

Risk On Uncertain Ground Heading Into Weekend, But Volatility Restrained

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 06:21 PM PDT

There have been few serious bouts of risk aversion over the past years. Does this past week's slump qualify?

Dollar, Equities and Pound High Face Critical Week for Event Risk and Direction

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 06:15 PM PDT

We are in the midst of the Summer Lull but don't expect a liquidity dearth to hold back a committed selloff should it arise.

US Dollar Impasse Will be Broken by FOMC Meeting and GDP Update

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 06:10 PM PDT

How confident is the FOMC of its outlook for interest rates?

Fed, BoE, RBA, BoJ Enter Critical 3Q, Economic Conditions Guide Policy

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 05:28 PM PDT

Central banks are increasingly warning next steps are data dependent. Are conditions strong enough to justify a Fed hike or more BoJ stimulus?

British Pound Enters a Critical 10 Days – Can it Continue Higher?

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 02:05 PM PDT

A big week of both UK and US economic event risk nonetheless points to bigger GBP/USD moves in the days ahead. Here’s what to watch.

Bearish AUD/USD Outlook to Gather Pace on RBA/Fed Policy Divergence

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 01:15 PM PDT

AUD/USD slipped to a fresh 2015 low (0.7259) as Australia faces a greater risk of losing its AAA credit-rating. Here’s what to watch

Gold Plummets for 5th Consecutive Week- Price at Support Ahead of Fed

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 01:15 PM PDT

Gold prices plummeted for a fifth consecutive week with the precious metal down nearly 4.3% to trade at 1085 ahead of the New York close on Friday.

Leaked Fed Staff Forecasts Project Hike Pace Softer Than FOMC

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 12:30 PM PDT

The Federal Reserve’s staff forecasts were inadvertently published on the Board’s public website, and the outlook was surprisingly softer than the FOMC’s.

What to Learn From NZDUSD Posting Highest Volume Day in 2015

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 12:00 PM PDT

Learn how the highest volume day in 2015 for NZD aligns with Sentiment & Chart Patterns

AUDUSD 6 Year Lows; 14 Year Trendline is Near .7100

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 10:25 AM PDT

AUDUSD is at a 6 year low, NZDUSD is just off of a 6 year low, and USDCAD is at an 11 year high. Be aware of a long term trendline in AUDUSD near .7100 and a long term Fibonacci confluence at .6370-.6400 in NZDUSD.

AUD/USD Hit by S&P Warning Shot- Retail FX Remains Long

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 09:40 AM PDT

AUD/USD remains at risk of facing additional headwinds over the near to medium-term amid the uncertainty surrounding the monetary & fiscal outlook.

The Weekly Volume Report: Sharp Move Lower in GBP OBV

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 07:40 AM PDT

Instruments covered this week: EUR/USD, USD/JPY & GBP/USD

USD/JPY Falls on Significant Miss in US New Home Sales Data

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 07:23 AM PDT

USDJPY had -11-pip plummet after US New Home Sales data slid to its weakest level in 2015.

EUR/JPY Topping Pattern?

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 05:30 AM PDT

Potential H&S pattern shaping up on the daily chart

FX Reversals: EURUSD Attempts Breakout

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 05:13 AM PDT

After a 209 pip retracement the EURUSD is attempting to breakout to a lower low. Learn today's trading values with the Chart of the Day!

USDOLLAR Index Fights Back to Trendline from June Lows

Posted: 24 Jul 2015 04:19 AM PDT

Hold the presses on the 'greenback may be topping' headlines: the past 24-hours have seen a quick revival by the US Dollar.

Australian Dollar Declines More Than 1 Percent In Morning Trade

Posted: 23 Jul 2015 09:59 PM PDT

The Aussie fell more than 1 percent versus in morning trade after a surprisingly sharp drop in Chinese PMI and unflattering S&P comments.

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