EUR/USD Aug. 11 – New week, new losses

EUR/USD starts the new week with a fresh slide below 1.34. The last minute recovery seen on Friday cannot hold ahead of GDP figures coming on later this week. Draghi’s words about EUR/USD are also echoing. With a light calendar, geo-politics can grab attention today, yet it seems that things are getting better.

 Here is a quick update on what’s moving the pair.

  • EUR/USD slid lower in the wake of the Asian session, and continued lower afterwards.
  • Current range: 1.3365 to 1.34.

Further levels in both directions:

  • Below: 1.3365, 1.3325, 1.3295 and 1.32.
  • Above: 1.34, 1.3450, 1.35, 1.3550, 1.3585 and 1.3610.
  • 1.3325 remains important support after two moves in that direction.
  • On the upside, 1.34 is under strong pressure. Will the pair break above this key level? 1.3450 follows.

EUR/USD Fundamentals

  • 7:15 FOMC member Stanley Fischer talked. He didn’t offer anything new.

*All times are GMT.

For more events and lines, see the EUR/USDEUR/USDEUR/USDEUR/USDEUR/USD.

EUR/USD Sentiment

  • ECB not worried about data, but explains why EUR/USD should fall: Mario Draghi’s press conference provided a lot of action. On one hand, the recent drop in inflation is seen as temporary, and weak growth did not surprise the central bank. On the other hand, preparations for QE are continuing in full speed and Draghi basically analyzed EUR/USD and reached a conclusion that it should fall. We will get growth data today.
  • Geopolitics stable for now: Russia has retaliated to sanctions with some of its own: a ban on food imports from the EU, the US and other countries, but Russia moved troops from the border.  The euro-zone could see food prices going down due to excessive supply. In addition, US president Obama has ordered airstrikes in a remote area of Iraq to prevent ISIL extremists from murdering Yazdi civilians, yet this doesn’t disrupt oil production so far. Hamas and Israel reached a fresh truce.
  • German manufacturing numbers soften: German data continues to point to trouble in the Eurozone’s largest economy. Industrial Production posted a gain of only 0.3%. Factory Production declined by 3.2%, the steepest drop since October 2012. The Bundesbank is blaming tensions with Russia and stronger EU sanctions against Moscow for the weak economic numbers,
  • US jobs data continues to shine: ISM Non-manufacturing PMI looked sharp, rising to 58.7 points last month. This included a stronger employment component which supports stronger job growth than the NFP. Jobless claims also triggered optimism with yet another read under 300K, and another drop in the 4 week moving average. Look out for the JOLTS figure coming later in the week.
  • US inflation data watched: The unit labor costs serves as yet another measure of core inflation. Both the Fed favorite Core PCE Price Index as well as Average Hourly Earnings remained low, indicating the Americans don’t have too much money in the their pockets so raising rates to curb demand is not that urgent. The latest FOMC statement did acknowledge that inflation could be closer to target, but expressed concern about the “underutilized” job market.

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