Weekly Forecast

EUR/USD: US Dollar rally stalls, but for how long?
The EUR/USD pair trimmed part of its recent losses and settled around 1.1450 as demand for the US Dollar (USD) cooled down. On the one hand, easing concerns about the Middle East war and its consequences pushed investors away from the USD's safety. On the other hand, tepid American data weighed on the local currency.
Gold: Buyers show interest as markets dial back near-term Fed rate hike expectations
Gold (XAU/USD) gathered bullish momentum and closed the week in positive territory after posting four consecutive weekly losses. Investors could react to changes in technical outlook in the near term amid an economic calendar that lacks high-impact events.
Bitcoin: Quarter-end rebalancing might fuel BTC next bullish move
Bitcoin (BTC) is up over 3% so far this week, trading above $61,800 at the time of writing on Friday after slipping to a 21-month low earlier this week. Institutional selling continued, with spot Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) recording net outflows of over $520 million through Thursday, pointing to the eighth consecutive week of withdrawals.
US Dollar: The Dollar stumbles, but the bigger picture remains unchanged
The US Dollar (USD) has come under fresh downward pressure this week. Indeed, the US Dollar Index (DXY) could not sustain its earlier advance past the 101.50 level, succumbing to fresh bearish pressure in the latter half of the week on the back of disappointing labour market data and the marked decline in USD/JPY.

Broker Reviews

Find independent, trusted reviews and choose your perfect broker.

Best brokers in your location

Latest Videos

Youtube preview

This Gold Indicator Has NEVER Signaled Something Like This Before...

Youtube preview

USD/IDR Near 18,000 — What Traders Must Watch

Youtube preview

🔴LIVE June NFP (US Jobs Data): Can NFP Shake the Warsh Fed?

Youtube preview

NFP Shock Incoming? Watch Gold at $3,900 #shorts

In-Depth Analysis

Kevin Warsh offers no policy clues: Why markets still got their answer

Financial markets came to Sintra looking for clues about the Federal Reserve's (Fed) next move. They largely left with confirmation that Fed Chair Kevin Warsh intends to make those clues much harder to find.

The market may no longer be giving the Magnificent Seven a free pass

For much of the past three years, investing has felt surprisingly simple. Whenever markets stumbled, investors knew where to look. Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta and Tesla repeatedly led Wall Street higher. Now, however, this dominance is being tested.