Summary
The key to producing trading income in the FX markets is having a strategy that anticipates market turns and market moves with a very high degree of accuracy. To do this, you must be able to identify where banks and institutions are buying and selling in the Forex market by looking at a price chart. This means training your eye to identify institution and bank demand and supply by looking at a price chart. During this session, Sam will begin to do this by covering core market timing strategy rules that offer you low risk, high reward, and high probability trading opportunities.Latest Live Videos
Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD consolidates below 1.1700 amid cautious markets
EUR/USD is holding steady below 1.1700 in the European trading hours on Thursday. The pair pauses its losing streak as the US Dollar consolidates the recent recovery amid a cautious market mood and ahead of the mid-tier US employment data.
GBP/USD turns lower to near 1.3450 amid softer risk tone
GBP/USD loses ground to trade near 1.3450 in the early European session on Thursday. Markets turn cautious amid simmering geopolitical tensions and ahead of the US labor market data due later in the day.
Gold sticks to intraday losses below $4,450; seems vulnerable to slide further
Gold maintains its offered tone through the first half of the European session and currently trades near the lower end of its daily range, down for the second straight day. The downfall lacks any obvious fundamental catalyst and could be attributed to some follow-through profit-taking ahead of the release of the US Nonfarm Payrolls report on Friday.
Pi Network flashes bearish potential as selling pressure mounts
Pi Network trades above $0.2000 at press time on Thursday, following a nearly 2% decline the previous day. Centralized Exchanges have received 1.90 million PI tokens over the last 24 hours, suggesting risk-off sentiment among holders. The technical outlook for the PI token remains bearish, with a risk of a cross below the 20-day Exponential Moving Average.
2026 economic outlook: Clear skies but don’t unfasten your seatbelts yet
Most years fade into the background as soon as a new one starts. Not 2025: a year of epochal shifts, in which the macroeconomy was the dog that did not bark. What to expect in 2026? The shocks of 2025 will not be undone, but neither will they be repeated.
Here is what you need to know on Thursday, January 8:
The European economic calendar will feature business and consumer sentiment data, alongsinde Eurozone PPI figures for November. In the second half of the day, weekly Initial Jobless Claims, October Trade Balance and Unit Labor Costs data for the third quarter from the US will be watched closely by market participants.