EUR/USD: Correction Expected After Friday’s Rally

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On Friday, trading on the euro closed up against the US dollar. The price rose sharply after the release of US data. The consumer price, retail sales and Michigan University indices did not match up to expectations. US 10Y bond yields fell by 2.6% on this news, reaching 2.27%. The euro rate restored to 1.1468. Buyers hit a session high of 1.1472 before trading closed.

US statistics:

  • The Michigan University consumer sentiment index fell to 93.1 (forecast: 95, previous reading: 95.1).
  • The industrial production index for June grew by 0.4% (forecast: 0.4%, previous reading: 0.1%).
  • The consumer price index in June came to 0.0% MoM, 1.6% YoY (forecast: 0.1% MoM, 1.7% YoY, previous reading: -0.1% MoM, 1.9% YoY).
  • The retail sales index fell by 0.2% for the month. The same index excluding autos also fell by 0.2%

Day’s news (GMT+3):

  • 12:00 Eurozone: CPI (Jun), CPI core (Jun);
  • 15:30 Canada: foreign portfolio investment in Canadian securities (May);
  • 15:30 USA: NY Empire State manufacturing index (Jul).

EUR/USD rate on the hourly. Source: TradingView

My expectation of growth for the euro on Friday rang true. The single currency appreciated against the greenback to 1.1424 and was trading beneath the LB balance line up until the US session. After the release of US statistics, the price restored to 1.1472.

So, what’s in store for the euro today? The 90 degree Gann level is at 1.1478. Missing this level by 3 pips, our pair has started a downwards correction from 1.1475. In my forecast, I’m expecting the euro to fall against the dollar to 1.1415 against Friday’s movements. The economic calendar is virtually empty, so nothing should interrupt the correction, at least until the balance line.

In order for the euro to break 1.15, the bulls can’t allow the bears to take the price any lower than 1.1442/40 (trend line from 1.1371). Given that the Stochastic is down, the price could go up a bit before falling. If the hourly candle closes above 1.1490, the euro won’t fall.

 

Disclaimer: Forecasts which are made in the review constitute the personal view of the author. Commentaries made do not constitute trade recommendations or guidance for working on financial markets. ...

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