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Editor's Picks

EUR/USD challenges 1.1800, multi-day lows

EUR/USD comes under extra selling pressure, slipping back toward six-day troughs near 1.1800 at the beginning of the week. The pair’s decline comes in response to marked gains in the US Dollar, as investors continue to digest the so-called “Warsh trade” and assess the latest US ISM Manufacturing prints.

GBP/USD stays on the back foot around 1.3650

GBP/USD adds to Friday’s losses and retests the 1.3650 region on Monday. Indeed, Cable’s retracement reflects the ongoing solid performance of the Greenback, while traders also begin to turn their attention to the upcoming BoE meeting.

Gold looks weak, hovers around $4,720

Gold manages to gather some composure following earlier lows around $4,400 per troy ounce on Monday, but the broader downtrend is still intact. The precious metal remains under pressure from a firmer US Dollar following Kevin Warsh’s nomination as the next Fed chair and the generalised correction in the commodity complex.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP extend correction amid mixed ETF flows, dwindling retail interest

Bitcoin consolidates above $77,000 after plummeting and testing April’s tariff-triggered lows, as investors remain cautious. Ethereum extends losses toward the psychological $2,000 support amid ETF outflows. XRP holds below its April low at $1.61 as futures Open Interest drops to $2.81 billion.

Warsh effect ripples through markets, central banks on deck this week

The first full month of the year is behind us, and, honestly, it has been rather more dramatic than most had anticipated when toasting the New Year. We wrapped up last week with US President Donald Trump announcing his Fed Chair pick. 

Ripple steadies after sell-off as low on-chain activity, retail interest weigh

XRP rebounds from last week’s support at $1.50 but struggles below resistance at $1.77. Active addresses on the XRP Ledger dropped below 18,000 on Sunday amid risk-averse sentiment. Retail interest in XRP continues to decline, with futures Open Interest dropping to $2.81 billion.