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Dollar analysis: EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD outlook – Forex Friday

Article By: ,  Market Analyst
  • Dollar analysis: Greenback rebounds from oversold levels
  • EUR/USD outlook: Is the euro heading to $1.15?
  • GBP/USD outlook: All eyes on inflation report
  • AUD/USD outlook: Chinese GDP and Australian jobs report eyed

Welcome to another edition of Forex Friday, a weekly report in which we discuss selected currency themes mainly from a macro viewpoint, but we also throw in a pinch of technical analysis here and there. In this week’s report, we will discuss a couple of dollar pairs and look forward to next week’s key events..

 

Dollar analysis: Greenback rebounds from oversold levels

The US dollar has had a terrible week, allowing the major currency pairs, indices, gold and oil to rally. The narrative that the Federal Reserve is winning the fight against inflation got a boost as both CPI and PPI came in weaker than expected. This caused the US Dollar Index to fall below 100. On Friday morning, though, the dollar was finding some love – but only because of the lack of any fresh news, which encouraged traders to book some profit. In the afternoon, we saw the release of the UoM consumer sentiment and inflation expectations indices, which came out higher than expected. The 1-year Inflation Expectations printed 3.4% vs. 3.1% expected, which would suggest inflation could remain sticky, requiring the contractionary monetary policy to be in place longer. So, we saw the likes of the USD/JPY bounce back and this caused the Dollar Index to edge higher.

Clearly, the dollar is oversold, as indicated for example by the RSI indicator moving below the ‘oversold’ threshold of 30 on the daily time frame.

With the dollar making lower lows, the path of least resistance is clearly to the downside and so we may well see previous support levels turn into resistance in the future. For the dollar to turn positive, it will have to create a higher high first. We will cross that bridge if and when we get there. For now, let’s see what it will do around 100.00. Resistance is seen around 100.82, the low that was formed in February. Above that, 102.00 would be the next big level to watch for resistance.

 

GBP/USD outlook: All eyes on inflation report

 

Already finding support from weakening US dollar, the GBP/USD advanced beyond 1.31 on the back of stronger UK data, showing the economy shrunk in May by 0.1% instead of 0.3% expected by economists. The UK economy may now grow modestly in the coming months, finding support from the improving real wages and given that energy bulls are slightly lower. Higher mortgage rates will hold growth back, which is something that could impact the long-term GBP/USD outlook and weigh on other pound crosses. For now, the path of least resistance is to the upside for the cable and other pound crosses.

 

Pound traders’ focus will turn to inflation data next Wednesday after we had higher-than-expected rise in wages this week. The Bank of England will mostly likely hike rates further at its next meeting on August 3 – the size of which could be determined by the upcoming inflation data. See below for more.

 

EUR/USD outlook: Is the euro heading to $1.15?

 

The prospects of one final rate hike from the Fed plus at least two more from the ECB is what is helping to drive the EUR/USD.  The tightening of rate differentials between the US and Eurozone should keep the EUR/USD supported on the dips. A move towards 1.15 is potentially underway.

The EUR/USD outlook remains positive heading into the weekend. The explosive breakout we have seen over the past couple of days suggests the EUR/USD bulls will likely remain in control of price action for a while yet, especially as the long-term trend is also bullish – look no further than the slope of the 200-day moving average.

Interestingly, there’s a Fibonacci-based price action in the making, namely a hormonic Butterfly – see the annotation on the chart. With price points X, A, B and C already established, the key question is where will point “D” occur. This is usually where price finds resistance and turns lows. Fibonacci extension levels can be our guide. The 127.2% extension of the BC leg comes in at 1.1220. But given the sharper move in this CD leg compared to the AB wave, I would expect the CD leg to be bigger than the AB leg. Thus, a continuation towards the 161.8% Fibonacci extension level at 1.1380 is where I would be looking for the EUR/USD to potentially form at least a temporary top.

Meanwhile, the long-term 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level against the drop from the 2021 high comes in at 1.1275.

In terms of support, Wednesday’s high at 1.1140 is now very important to hold insofar as the short-term EUR/USD outlook is concerned. If that breaks, then the April high at 1.1095 will be the next level to potentially provide support or else we will see a revisit of the more significant support around the 1.10 handle.

 

 

AUD/USD outlook: Chinese GDP and Australian jobs report eyed

 

For commodity dollars, the most important event next week is likely to be the data dump from China on Monday. The world’s second largest economy has not been doing very well lately, which explains why the Chinese stock markets and yuan have been among the weakest in their respective fields. This has also held the likes of the AUD and NZD back. Both of these currencies should move in the direction of surprise in Chinese data next week. The AUD/USD outlook could also be influenced by Australia’s employment report, due on Thursday.

Retail sales aside, the economic calendar is void of any major US data next week, which should allow the US dollar to potentially make a small recovery after a bruising week. There will be lots of company earnings, though, that could drive market sentiment, until central banks are in focus again the following week.

For the AUD/USD, the key support level is around 0.6800 now, which was previously a pivotal level. In light of this week’s breakout, the bulls will not want to see rates go back below that level now.

 

Week ahead

 

China GDP

Monday, July 17

03:00 BST

The world’s second largest economy has not been doing very well lately, which explains why the Chinese stock markets and yuan have been among the weakest in their respective fields. We will find out exactly how China performed in Q2 after output had expanded by an above-forecast 4.5% in Q1 compared to the same period in 2022. We will also have the latest retail sales and industrial production figures release at the same time.

 

US Retail Sales

Tuesday, July 18

13:30 BST

Last week saw both CPI and PPI measures of inflation slow more than expected, raising the possibility that the Fed could pause rate hikes after one final hike in July. If we see retail sales data come in stronger, this will reinforce a goldilocks scenario of slowing prices and a resilient consumer, which should keep the bulls on Wall Street happy. But a weaker print could raise recession fears and undermine investor confidence.

 

UK CPI

Wednesday, July 19

07:00 BST

 

Pound traders’ focus will turn to inflation data on Wednesday after we had higher-than-expected rise in wages last week. The Bank of England will mostly likely hike rates further at its next meeting on August 3. The question is whether it will be 25- or another 50-bps hike. The latest inflation print will have a big say in that.

  

Source for all charts used in this article: TradingView.com

 

 

-- Written by Fawad Razaqzada, Market Analyst

Follow Fawad on Twitter @Trader_F_R

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