Yesterday, despite high activity of the bears USD/CAD took notice of the cluster around 1.3150, which unites the monthly PP, 55-day SMA and weekly S1, and it is thus unlikely to give in easily.
The Aussie-Dollar pulled back to the falling trend-line and acknowledged it as a new support. The situation therefore warrants a bullish outlook.
Despite the fact that EUR/JPY has broken through important resistance at 136.74/64 (monthly PP and 100-day SMA) the bias remains negative.
As expected, gold prices advanced after the Fed decision to maintain the current stance of monetary policy.
USD/JPY has fallen from the upper trend-line of the triangle the currency pair has been forming since the last days of August.
Yesterday the Cable broke through the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the drop observed during the last week of August.
After the Fed decided to keep interest rates on hold, EUR/USD skyrocketed up to the 1.14 level where it consolidated by the end of yesterday.
So far this week the Kiwi has been trading flat with a slight bullish bias. The monthly PP at 0.6375 is expected to act as a ceiling and limit potential gains
Just like AUD/USD the Dollar-Loonie pair also refused to respect the borders implied by the channel, in this case of an upward one.
AUD/USD did not behave as expected—the pair closed above the upper trend-line that forms the channel.
EUR/JPY did not post a third red day in a row but bounced off of the weekly pivot point at 135.60.
The precious metal decided to act decisively one day before the Federal Reserve makes a decision on interest rates.
Unlike in the pair with the British Pound the Dollar appreciated versus the Yen yesterday.
Despite the bearish signals the Cable jumped more than 170 pips yesterday on poor US and strong UK data.
Bears were dominating the development of the EUR/USD currency pair for the most part of Wednesday.
The NZ Dollar is about to post a third day of gains in a row.
USD/CAD refuses to leave the vicinity of the recently formed up-trend, which adds to the pressure on 1.3245/36 and thus increases the probability of a bearish break-out.
So far today AUD/USD has been bullish—the currency pair has already negated yesterday's losses.
Although at some point EUR/JPY fetched some 60 pips below the weekly PP yesterday, the immediate support at 135.60 was left intact.
Neutral expectations for gold are currently being confirmed by the real price development.
We will hold a bearish view with respect to USD/JPY as long as the monthly pivot point and 200-day SMA that stand next to 121 remain intact.
There is a high chance we are going to see a bullish correction in the nearest future after yesterday's drop.
EUR/USD was sent downwards after somewhat positive US statistics, and the pair has finally managed to confirm the 1.13 mark.
A rally of the last three days is highly unlikely to extend much higher.