Sat, Apr 25, 2026 10:36 GMT
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    EUR/GBP Daily Outlook

    ActionForex

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.8785; (P) 0.8794; (R1) 0.8806; More…

    Intraday bias in EUR/GBP remains neutral outlook is unchanged. Considering bearish divergence condition in D MACD, sustained trading below 55 D EMA (now at 0.745) will solidify the case of bearish reversal. Deeper fall should then be seen to 0.8631 cluster (38.2% retracement of 0.8221 to 0.8663 at 0.8618). However, break of 0.8816 minor resistance will bring stronger rebound to retest 0.8863 high instead.

    In the bigger picture, rise from 0.8221 medium term bottom is still seen as a corrective move. Upside should be limited by 61.8% retracement of 0.9267 to 0.8221 at 0.8867. Sustained trading below 55 W EMA (now at 0.8600) should confirm that this corrective bounce has completed. However, decisive break of 0.8867 will suggest that EUR/GBP is already reversing whole decline from 0.9267 (2022 high). That should pave the way back to 0.9267.

    EUR/AUD Daily Outlook

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.7660; (P) 1.7711; (R1) 1.7757; More...

    Intraday bias in EUR/AUD remains mildly on the downside for 1.7627 support. Firm break there will argue that decline from 0.8160 is ready to resume through 1.7561 support next. On the upside, above 1.7794 minor resistance will turn intraday bias neutral again first.

    In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.8554 medium term top are seen as a corrective pattern. Sustained break of 55 W EMA (now at 1.7426) will suggest that it's correcting the whole rally from 1.4281 (2022 low). In this case, deeper decline would be seen to 38.2% retracement of 1.4281 to 1.8554 at 1.6922. Nevertheless, strong rebound from 55 W EMA will likely bring resumption of the up trend sooner.

    EUR/CHF Daily Outlook

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.9322; (P) 0.9335; (R1) 0.9348; More....

    Sideway trading continues in EUR/CHF and intraday bias remains neutral. As noted before, fall from 0.9660 could have completed at 0.9178, on bullish convergence condition in D MACD. Above 0.9349 will resume the rise from 0.9178, and target 0.9452 resistance next. However, break of 0.9275 will turn bias back to the downside for 0.9178 low instead.

    In the bigger picture, outlook remains bearish with EUR/CHF staying well inside long term falling channel after multiple rejection by 55 W EMA (now at 0.9371). Next target is 61.8% projection of 1.1149 to 0.9407 from 0.9928 at 0.8851. Break of 0.9452 resistance is needed to be the first sign of medium term bottoming. Otherwise, outlook will stay bearish in case of strong rebound.

    USD/CAD Daily Outlook

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3952; (P) 1.3984; (R1) 1.4000; More...

    Intraday bias in USD/CAD remains neutral and some more consolidations could be seen above 1.3936. Risk will stay on the downside as long as 55 4H EMA(now at 1.4021) holds. Below 1.3936 will target 38.2% retracement of 1.3538 to 1.4139 at 1.3909. Sustained break there will indicate that whole rise from 1.3538 has completed. Deeper fall should then be seen to 61.8% retracement at 1.3768 next. However, firm break of 55 4H EMA will retain near term bullishness, and bring retest of 1.4139 high.

    In the bigger picture, price actions from 1.4791 medium term top is likely just unfolding as a correction to up trend from 1.2005 (2021 low), with rise from 1.3538 as the second leg. A third leg should follow before up trend resumption. That is, range trading is set to extend for the medium term. For now, this will remain the favored case as long as 1.3886 support holds. However, firm break of 1.3886 will revive the case that fall from 1.4791 is indeed a larger scale correction.

    AUD/USD Daily Report

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.6544; (P) 0.6558; (R1) 0.6578; More...

    Intraday bias in AUD/USD stays on the upside at this point. Decisive break of 0.6579 resistance should confirm that whole fall from 0.6706 has completed as a three wave correction. Stronger rally should then be seen back to retest 0.6706. However, below 0.6519 minor support will turn intraday bias back to the downside for 0.6413 key support.

    In the bigger picture, there is no clear sign that down trend from 0.8006 (2021 high) has completed. Rebound from 0.5913 is seen as a corrective move. Outlook will remain bearish as long as 38.2% retracement of 0.8006 to 0.5913 at 0.6713 holds. Break of 0.6413 support will suggest rejection by 0.6713 and solidify this bearish case. Nevertheless, considering bullish convergence condition in W MACD, sustained break of 0.6713 will be a strong sign of bullish trend reversal, and pave the way to 0.6941 structural resistance for confirmation.

    USD/JPY Daily Outlook

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 155.47; (P) 155.83; (R1) 156.22; More...

    Intraday in USD/JPY remains neutral at this point. With near term rising channel floor intact, further rally is expected. Above 156.57 minor resistance will bring retest of 157.88. Further break there will resume the whole rally from 139.87. Next target is 158.86 structural resistance, and then 161.94 high. However, sustained break of the channel support will bring deeper correction to 55 D EMA (now at 153.06), and raise the chance of near term trend reversal.

    In the bigger picture, current development suggests that corrective pattern from 161.94 (2024 high) has completed with three waves at 139.87. Larger up trend from 102.58 (2021 low) could be ready to resume through 161.94 high. Decisive break of 158.85 structural resistance will solidify this bullish case and target 161.94 for confirmation. On the downside, break of 150.90 resistance turned support will dampen this bullish view and extend the corrective range pattern with another falling leg.

    USD/CHF Daily Outlook

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.8020; (P) 0.8036; (R1) 0.8046; More

    Intraday bias in USD/CHF remains neutral for the moment. Outlook is unchanged that price actions from 0.7828 low is seen as a corrective pattern. On the upside, above 0.8070 will indicate that pattern is still extending, and turn bias back to the upside for 0.8123 and above. On the downside, below 0.7995 will bring deeper fall back towards 0.7877 support.

    In the bigger picture, long term down trend from 1.0342 (2017 high) is still in progress. Next target is 100% projection of 1.0146 (2022 high) to 0.8332 from 0.9200 at 0.7382. In any case, outlook will stay bearish as long as 0.8332 support turned resistance holds (2023 low).

    GBP/USD Daily Outlook

    Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.3188; (P) 1.3205; (R1) 1.3231; More...

    GBP/USD recovered after drawing support from 55 4H EMA (now at 1.3191) and intraday bias is turned neutral again. On the downside, below 1.3178 temporary low will bring deeper fall to retest 1.3008 low. On the upside, however, sustained trading above 55 D EMA (now at 1.3263) should confirm that fall from 1.3787 has completed. Further rise should then be seen to 1.3725/3787 resistance zone.

    In the bigger picture, the break of 55 W EMA (now at 1.3184) is taken as the first sign that corrective rise from 1.0351 (2022 low) has completed. Decisive break of trend line support (now at 1.2760) will solidify this case and target 38.2% retracement of 1.0351 to 1.3787 at 1.2474 next. Meanwhile, in case of another rise, strong resistance should emerge below 1.4248 (2021 high) to cap upside to preserve the long term down trend.

    Swiss CPI back at 0.0% as broad price declines in November

    Swiss inflation softened in November, with headline CPI falling -0.2% mom, in line with expectations, while annual inflation slowed from 0.1% yoy to 0.0%, undershooting forecasts of 0.1%. Core CPI also dipped, falling -0.1% yoy, with the annual rate easing from 0.5% yoy to 0.4%. The data highlight Switzerland’s continued weak inflation, keeping price growth far below levels seen elsewhere in Europe.

    Both domestic and imported prices contributed to the decline. Domestic products fell -0.2% mom, while imported goods dropped a sharper -0.4% mom. On a yearly basis, domestic inflation cooled from 0.5% yoy to 0.4%, and imported prices remained deeply negative at -1.3% yoy. The persistent weakness in imported goods continues to anchor Swiss inflation near zero.

    Full Swiss CPI release here.

    The Next Fed Chair Becoming Ever More Certain

    Markets

    The Japanese-inspired core bond selloff eased yesterday. An unconvincing attempt to eke out a few more bps during European dealings was more or less killed off in the US session. Net daily changes for US Treasury yields eventually varied between -2.1 bps to +0.9 bps in technical trading. The German curve shifted similarly by shedding 1.4 bps at the front. Even UK yields swapped earlier gains for minor declines across the curve. We wouldn’t call it a day on the underlying forces though. Japanese yields this morning are again headed north with new highs for the (ultra) long maturities including the 30-year ahead of a closely watched auction tomorrow. News in any case was scarce yesterday and that seemed to suffice for riskier assets to recover some ground. European and US equities inched 0.3-0.6% higher and crypto markets rebounded in a daily perspective after the violent selloff in recent weeks. The likes of Bitcoin extend gains to almost 94k, the strongest level since mid-November. The meeting between US envoy Witkoff and Russian president Putin and his entourage was called constructive by the Kremlin but no compromise was reached yet. Sticking to event risks, French politics reared its head again with local newspaper Le Figaro reporting that Horizons won’t back premier Lecornu’s social security budget bill in the upcoming vote December 9. Being part of the coalition government, Horizons’ lack of support is a reminder of how fragile and perhaps deceiving the current French calm is. OATs underperformed compared to European peers. The euro ignores the matter for now. After an uninspiring session yesterday, EUR/USD is gently trending north this morning towards first resistance around 1.165-1.167 (short term highs). The trade-weighted dollar index depreciates back to the 99 area. The economic agenda has things in store that could spice up the session today. ECB president Lagarde appears before parliament. The ADP job report and services ISM are to further shape Fed expectations for December. A rate cut is priced for 95% now. At this stage it would take blow-out numbers to flip the balance again by December 10. The next Fed chair meanwhile is becoming ever more certain. Hassett emerges as the frontrunner and favours a growth-supporting policy – perhaps the most compared to the other contestants. President Trump will officially announce Powell’s successor early 2026. Barring renewed risk aversion for whatever reason (France, public finances, equity valuation … ) we’d expect the dollar to remain on the backfoot. Were EUR/USD to take out the recent highs, the 1.1728 October top – 1.1747 61.2% recovery on the Sep-Nov decline emerges as the next reference. EUR/GBP’s three-day win streak ran into resistance around 0.88. We hold our negative bias for sterling though and assume EUR/GBP’s fundamental level to be 0.90+.

    News & Views

    Australian GDP growth slowed from an upwardly revised 0.7% Q/Q in in Q2 to 0.4% in Q3 (vs +0.7% consensus), the average quarterly growth pace since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. Annual growth ticked up from 2% to 2.1%. Details showed final consumption rising by 0.6% Q/Q with both household (+0.5%) and government (+0.8%) spending contributing to growth. The household saving ratio rose from 6% in Q2 to 6.4% in Q3 with gross disposable income (+1.7%) rising faster than nominal household spending (+1.4%). Total gross fixed capital formation rose a strong 3% Q/Q mainly due to a rebound in public investments (+3% Q/Q after -3.5% Q/Q in Q2). Net trade detracted 0.1 ppt from GDP growth, with imports up 1.5%, and exports up 1%. Today’s numbers strengthen market belief that the next move by the Reserve Bank of Australia will a rate hike next year. AUD/USD builds on its recent comeback, eyeing first resistance around 0.66. The Aussie yield curve bear flattens this morning with yields rising by 5.8 bps (2-yr) to 3.2 bps (30-yr).

    The EU agreed to gradually prohibit Russian LNG gas import by the end of 2026, one year faster than originally planned. Russia is still the second-largest LNG-provider (15% of total) to Europe after the US. The deadline now matches with the ban of seaborne deliveries which is already part of EU sanctions against Russia. The EU’s RePowerEU plan also targets halting to pipeline gas imports under long-term deals by the end of Q3 2027. The commission also plans to put forward a legislative proposal on phasing out Russian oil imports no later than the end of 2027.