FX at key levels as JPY rebounds, EUR/GBP pushes higher and Bitcoin corrects [Video]
Author

Kim Cramer Larsson
KCL Consult
Kim Cramer Larsson hosts the Daily Technical Update, a daily 15-20 minutes video with live charts.
Author

Kim Cramer Larsson
KCL Consult
Kim Cramer Larsson hosts the Daily Technical Update, a daily 15-20 minutes video with live charts.
The GBP/USD pair gathers strength to around 1.3430 during the Asian trading hours on Friday. The British Pound edges higher against the US Dollar on the UK government leadership transition and growing expectations of further Bank of England interest rate hikes.
The EUR/USD pair posts modest gains around 1.1430 during the early Asian session on Friday, bolstered by a softer US Dollar. The European Central Bank is grappling with elevated core inflation, forcing traders to price in more aggressive tightening despite mixed guidance from ECB officials.
Gold is defending the $4,100 level early Friday, trying hard to capitalize on this week’s rebound from four-day lows of $4,022 even as tensions in the Middle East appear to have somewhat eased. Despite the recent upswing, Gold remains on track to book a weekly loss, undermined by the revival of inflationary concerns.
Bitcoin price rises above $63,000 extending its recovery as tensions between the US and Iran ease following missile strikes earlier this week. DeXe (DEXE) and Arbitrum (ARB) are leading gains over the last 24 hours as the broader market risk-off sentiment eases.
Markets opened July with a December hike as the base case and spent five trading sessions unlearning and relearning it. A 57K payrolls print bled the tightening bets out of the strip; a re-shut Strait of Hormuz is pushing them back in. Wednesday's minutes from the June Federal Open Market Committee meeting landed mid-round-trip, describing a world that had already stopped existing.
Central banks have spent years telling markets what might come next. Now, traders face the possibility that they say a lot less. From the Federal Reserve to the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, policymakers are pushing back against forward guidance.