Guide to the EUR/USD Breakdown and Where Next

EUR/USD continues falling steadily yet persistently and is digging deeper in two-month lows. The loss of the uptrend support line (within the narrowing channel) proved decisive.A combination of Obama’s re-election and Greece’s issues continues weighing on the pair. Where will it end?

EUR USD Two Month Break of Channel – Click image to enlarge

  • EUR/USD already lost the channel on Friday, November 2nd, after the excellent Non-Farm Payrolls report. At that moment, it became evident to many market participants that the report does not provide ammunition for Romney, and that Obama’s chances are higher, and the market began pricing in an Obama victory.
  • EUR/USD then continued lower on Monday, as Greece’s situation remained pessimistic. It broke the 1.28 support line and reached an 8 week low.
  • Obama’s re-election was first greeted with a small cheer in the Asian session: EUR/USD rose but met resistance at 1.2880. Doubts were already cast here in Forex Crunch. This was either “sell the rumor buy the fact response”, or a non-US reaction of the US election.
  • From the US session on Wednesday, the picture totally changed: stock markets plunged and so did the dollar on fears of an unsuccessful resolution of the fiscal cliff. The nearing deadline for Greece didn’t help. Eventually, the guide to trading the US elections with EUR/USD proved correct.
  • The drop continued gradually – Draghi didn’t change the course.

Where Next?

From here, there are two big lines to watch: 1.26 is a round number and also a cap of the previous range at the end of August. More important, 1.2440 was the bottom of this support area.

More lines are in the EURUSD forecast.

It will take some time until we get serious news about the fiscal cliff. In the meantime, here is all you need to know about The Cliff.

In the nearer term, Greece is in the limelight:

  • Greece can be either saved for now with some ECB trickery – the revolving doors act that saved the country from defaulting in August. Basically, the ECB lends money to Greek banks, that buy Greek government bonds. The banks then pledge the bonds as collateral with the ECB. Is this monetary financing? Does it matter?
  • Or, the country could leave the euro-zone now that the US elections are over. Why? First and foremost, now that Europe knows who’s in control in Washington, it knows who to potentially coordinate the Grexit with.

But, there are more reasons to consider this scenario: here are 5 Reasons Why Greece Could Leave the Euro-Zone After the US Elections

Get the 5 most predictable currency pairs

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