EURUSD seller take the pair to the lowest level since April 8th. Sellers in control.
The EURUSD is extending lower, falling to a new session low at 1.1593 after failing to sustain an earlier upside break in the early Asian-Pacific session. In the early trading today, the pair traded as high as 1.1661 briefly pushing above a key swing area ceiling near 1.1655, a level that had capped rallies throughout the week (see post from yesterday). However, the bullish momentum quickly faded as buyers ran into resistance ahead of the falling 100-hour moving average, and once the rally stalled, sellers regained control.
The rejection from the highs triggered a steady rotation lower today. Initially, the pair slipped back below the key 50% midpoint of the March-to-June rally at 1.16287, a level that had acted as an important support floor for much of the European and North American session yesterday. The inability to hold above that midpoint shifted the near-term bias even more in favor of the sellers and increased the technical significance of that area going forward.
Once below the midpoint, downside momentum accelerated further as the pair also broke beneath a swing area support zone between 1.1605 and 1.16159. That break opened the door for additional liquidation selling, with traders responding to a broader shift in market sentiment.
US yields pushed sharply higher, with the US 10-year yield rising 5.2 basis points to 4.675%, while US stocks moved lower, helping to underpin the US dollar broadly. Interestingly, crude oil did not participate in the risk-off move and remains lower by around -0.78% on the day, limiting some of the inflation-related support for commodity-linked currencies.
Technically, the focus now shifts toward the next major downside target at the 61.8% retracement of the move up from the March low at 1.15768. That Fibonacci level represents the next key support target for sellers looking to extend the bearish correction. A break below that level would increase bearish momentum and likely have traders targeting deeper retracement levels from the broader March rally.
For traders already leaning to the downside, risk parameters can now be adjusted lower. The broken swing area high at 1.16159 becomes the first close risk level, while the more important technical barometer remains the 50% midpoint at 1.16287. As long as the price stays below those levels, sellers maintain the near-term technical advantage. Buyers would need to reclaim those levels — and ultimately move back above 1.1655 and the falling 100-hour moving average — to shift the bias back to the upside.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.