By FXEmpire.com
Introduction: Out of the major currency pairs the most popular and easy to trade currency pair is the EUR/USD. It has become so popular with traders these days that even when there is no visible trade to be had it is yet traded as a matter of habit. This is of course something that should be avoided and any investor who trades this currency pair wisely can do so successfully with sizable profits at the end of the day.
The first thing with trading currencies is to realize that the EUR/USD is made up of two separate currencies although considered to be one unit when taken as a pair. The weaknesses and strengths of each currency have to be taken into consideration when trading the unit as it influences the final outcome. Another factor that is often overlooked by traders or investors is that the weakening of one currency along with the strengthening of the other currency in the pair results in the generation of pips. It is according to this that entry and exit from the Forex market has to be done in order to maintain profitability.
- The interest rate differential between the European Bank(ECB) and the Federal Reserve(FED)
- Dollar strength drives EUR/USD lower
- FED intervention to weaken the dollar the sends EUR/USD higher
Weekly Analysis and Recommendation:
The EUR/USD closed down at 1.2570 after a bumpy week saw the currency just about to hit 1.28 and tumble to as low as 1.23.
This has been a week to remember.
We had the Greek, Egyptian and French elections, all averting disasters but the fear was still there are real. Greece was finally able to form a government and move forward.
The G20 meetings concluded with most of the nations agreeing out plans to sure up banks and countries around the globe and to build plans to foster growth. It was one of the most watched and reported meeting in years.
This was immediately followed by the FOMC decisions, which had the world waiting on edge and Mr. Bernanke did not disappoint, he lowered the Fed forecast for US growth, and extended Operation Twist and nothing else, much to the dismay of the markets, as we saw gold tumble close to 50.00 in just a few short hours.
The European Central Bank Friday said it had decided to widen the range of securities that it accepts from euro-zone banks in exchange for its loans.
Italy, France, Spain and Germany agreed to push European leaders at a key summit next week to sign off on a EUR130 billion euro plan aimed at increasing growth in Europe’s beleaguered economies.
Germany’s widely-watched Ifo index of business sentiment dropped again in June. Though the drop was not as shocking as the one in May, when the fall was nearly three percentage points, June’s dip shows that the euro zone crisis is taking its toll on the German economy.
Spain’s government said Friday it plans to make its official request for European Union aid for its banking sector Monday, and expects to have the terms for such aid set by July 9, as discussions continue on ways to inject European aid funds directly into ailing Spanish banks. Spanish Finance Minister Luis de Guindos said
The German central bank rejected on Monday proposals for a bond redemption fund allowing eurozone states to share liability for debts over and beyond defined EU ceilings. The idea was first floated by Germany’s council of economic advisors, an independent panel of experts which advises the government on economic matters. They suggested that a special redemption or stabilization fund be set up to prevent the eurozone’s sovereign crisis from escalating out of control.
All in all it was a memorable week, with investors nerves pushed to the limits, this week doesn’t promise to be much better as we come close to the end of the month, with all the month end eco data about to be released.
US markets won’t be where most of next week’s action will be, but there may still be enough to whet the appetite of the volatility player without having to look north for leveraged volatility trades fed by frequently changing monetary policy directions.
The week’s data risk will be mostly focused upon three reports. We think consumer confidence will take a step back as lower gasoline prices are offset by deteriorating jobs data and by weak equities up to the survey period. Durable goods are also likely to come in soft with few aircraft orders and a likely softer vehicle orders component. Personal spending isn’t shaping up well either given that we already know that retail sales slipped lower during May, although services spending may be more resilient. In all, the main releases may extend the tone of disappointing higher frequency reports on the health of the US economy in the lead-up to the following week when the big releases like ISM and nonfarm hit. Other releases next week include new home sales following a weak resale report, and pending home sales that may get a lift after the prior month’s sharp drop. There are no expected revisions to the final Q1 GDP figures
FxEmpire provides in-depth analysis for each currency and commodity we review. Fundamental analysis is provided in three components. We provide a detailed monthly analysis and forecast at the beginning of each month. Then we provide more recent analysis and information in our weekly reports and we provide daily updates and outlooks.
Major Economic Events for the week of June 19-22, 2012 actual v. forecast
Date |
Time |
Currency |
Importance |
Event |
Actual |
Forecast |
Previous |
Jun. 19 |
02:30 |
AUD |
Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes |
||||
10:00 |
EUR |
German ZEW Economic Sentiment |
-16.9 |
4.0 |
10.8 |
||
Jun. 20 |
09:30 |
GBP |
Claimant Count Change |
8.1K |
-3.0K |
-12.8K |
|
17:30 |
USD |
Interest Rate Decision |
0.25% |
0.25% |
0.25% |
||
19:15 |
USD |
Fed Chairman Bernanke Speaks |
|||||
23:45 |
NZD |
GDP (QoQ) |
1.1% |
0.5% |
0.4% |
||
Jun. 21 |
09:30 |
GBP |
Retail Sales (MoM) |
1.4% |
1.2% |
-2.4% |
|
13:30 |
Core Retail Sales (MoM) |
-0.3% |
0.2% |
0.3% |
|||
13:30 |
USD |
Initial Jobless Claims |
387K |
380K |
389K |
||
15:00 |
USD |
Existing Home Sales |
4.55M |
4.57M |
4.62M |
||
Jun. 22 |
09:00 |
EUR |
German Ifo Business Climate Index |
105.3 |
105.9 |
106.9 |
|
13:30 |
CAD |
Core CPI (MoM) |
0.2% |
0.3% |
0.4% |
Historical:
Highest: 1.5091 USD on Dec03, 2009.
Average: 1.3709 USD over this period.
Lowest: 1.19 USD on Jun07, 2010.
Economic Highlights of the coming week that affect the Euro, GBP, CHF and the USD
Date |
Time |
Currency |
Event |
Previous |
Jun 25 |
6:00 |
EUR |
GfK German Consumer Climate |
5.7 |
25th-30th |
GBP |
Nationwide HPI m/m |
0.3% |
|
14:00 |
USD |
New Home Sales |
343K |
|
Jun 26 |
8:30 |
GBP |
Public Sector Net Borrowing |
-18.8B |
13:00 |
USD |
S&P/CS Composite-20 HPI y/y |
-2.6% |
|
14:00 |
USD |
CB Consumer Confidence |
64.9 |
|
Jun 27 |
All Day |
EUR |
German Prelim CPI m/m |
-0.2% |
8:30 |
GBP |
BBA Mortgage Approvals |
32.4K |
|
10:00 |
GBP |
CBI Realized Sales |
21 |
|
12:30 |
USD |
Durable Goods Orders m/m |
0.2% |
|
14:00 |
USD |
Pending Home Sales m/m |
-5.5% |
|
14:30 |
USD |
Crude Oil Inventories |
||
Jun 28 |
7:55 |
EUR |
German Unemployment Change |
0K |
8:30 |
GBP |
Current Account |
-8.5B |
|
8:30 |
GBP |
BOE Credit Conditions Survey |
||
8:30 |
GBP |
Final GDP q/q |
-0.3% |
|
12:30 |
USD |
Unemployment Claims |
||
12:30 |
USD |
Final GDP q/q |
1.9% |
|
23:01 |
GBP |
GfK Consumer Confidence |
-29 |
|
Jun 29 |
29th-4th |
EUR |
German Retail Sales m/m |
0.6% |
6:45 |
EUR |
French Consumer Spending m/m |
0.6% |
|
7:00 |
CHF |
KOF Economic Barometer |
0.81 |
|
8:00 |
EUR |
M3 Money Supply y/y |
2.5% |
|
9:00 |
EUR |
CPI Flash Estimate y/y |
2.4% |
|
12:30 |
USD |
Core PCE Price Index m/m |
0.1% |
|
12:30 |
USD |
Personal Spending m/m |
0.3% |
|
13:45 |
USD |
Chicago PMI |
52.7 |
|
13:55 |
USD |
Revised UoM Consumer Sentiment |
74.1 |
Upcoming Government Bond Auctions
Date Time Country
Jun 25 09:10 Norway
Jun 25 09:30 Germany
Jun 25 10:00 Belgium
Jun 25 15:30 Italy
Jun 26 00:30 Japan
Jun 26 08:30 Holland
Jun 26 08:30 Spain
Jun 26 09:10 Italy
Jun 26 09:30 UK
Jun 26 14:30 UK
Jun 26 17:00 US
Jun 27 09:10 Italy
Jun 27 09:10 Sweden
Jun 27 17:00 US
Jun 28 09:10 Italy
Jun28 17:00 US
Click here to read EUR/USD Technical Analysis.
Originally posted here