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EU exports jump 15.% yoy in March on strong US shipments
Eurozone trade data showed a strong performance in March, with exports rising 13.7% yoy to EUR 279.8B and imports up 8.8% yoy to EUR 243.0B, resulting in a solid trade surplus of EUR 36.8B. Intra-eurozone trade also rose 1.7% yoy to EUR 226.0B, indicating modest growth in internal demand.
For the broader European Union, the trade picture was similarly positive. Exports jumped 15.2% yoy to EUR 254.8B, while imports increased by 10.4% yoy to EUR 219.5B, yielding a EUR 35.3B surplus.
The standout development came from transatlantic trade: EU exports to the United States surged 59.5% yoy to EUR 71.4B, far outpacing the 15.8% yoy rise in imports from the U.S.
Meanwhile, trade with the UK also showed moderate growth, with exports rising 4.8% yoy and imports increasing 5.4% yoy. In contrast, trade with China as a weak spot. EU exports to China fell sharply by -10.1% yoy to EUR 17.9B, while imports surged 15.8% yoy to EUR 48.6B.
USD/JPY Forecast: Yen Strength Revival Below 149.00 Resistance
Key takeaways
- USD/JPY rebounded sharply from 140.00 to 148.65 but quickly reversed, showing signs of a failed bullish breakout amid profit-taking and technical resistance.
- The Bank of Japan held rates steady and cut its growth forecast, reinforcing expectations of a slower pace of policy normalization in 2025.
- US-Japan 10Y and 2Y yield spreads continue to narrow, putting downside pressure on USD/JPY and signalling weakening dollar-yen fundamentals.
- Bearish momentum resurfaced in USD/JPY, but a break above 149.00 would invalidate the bearish scenario and open the door to 151.30–154.50.
Since our last publication, the USD/JPY has staged an initial push down to test the first medium-term support zone of 140.30/140.00, as highlighted (it printed an intraday low of 139.89 on 22 April).
Before the expected relief US dollar bounce took shape, the USD/JPY rallied by 4.4% to hit an intraday high of 145.93 on 2 May. A US dollar setback occurred, causing it to slide towards an intraday low of 142.35 on 6 May.
A pause in JPY strength due to BoJ and risk-on sentiment
The initial two weeks of US dollar strength against the Japanese yen have been reinforced by the recently concluded Bank of Japan (BoJ) monetary policy decision meeting last Thursday, 1 May. The BoJ switched into a “dovish hold” stance by keeping its short-term policy interest rate unchanged at 0.5% but slashed its current fiscal year growth forecast to 0.5% from 1.1%, citing trade tariff uncertainty.
However, the Japanese yen's strength against the US dollar was short-lived as the USD/JPY managed to propel higher by 4.4% to hit a high of 148.65 on Monday, 12 May, triggered by a renewed bout of risk-on sentiment over the growing optimism of US-China trade tensions de-escalation.
BoJ’s normalisation monetary policy is likely to be less hawkish
Fig 1: Japan implied forward short-term interest rate curve as of 15 May 2025 (Source: Macro Micro)
Market expectations for Bank of Japan rate hikes in 2025 have softened compared to three months ago. The forward-implied short-term policy rate, derived from interest rate futures, has shifted lower, now projected at 0.66% by December 2025, down from 0.83% previously. However, this remains slightly above the 0.57% level seen just a month ago (see Fig 1).
However, other factors can support a potential resurgence of Japanese yen strength.
US Treasuries-JGBs yield spreads remain below key resistances
Fig 2: 10-YR & 2-YR yield spreads of US Treasuries/JGBs medium-term trends as of 16 May 2025 (Source: TradingView)
Since 6 January 2025, the 10-year and 2-year yield spreads of the US Treasury notes over Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) have continued to narrow (trended downwards) below their respective key medium-term pivotal resistances of 3.60% and 3.84%, respectively.
If their downward trajectory remains intact, the 10-year and 2-year yield spreads of the US Treasury notes over JGBs may see further downside towards 2.47% and 2.90% next, which in turn may trigger further downside pressure on the USD/JPY (see Fig 2).
A failure bullish breakout in the USD/JPY technical chart
Fig 3: USD/JPY medium-term trend as of 16 May 2025 (Source: TradingView)
The USD/JPY’s swift intraday rally of 2.1% seen on Monday, 16 May, is the best single-day gain of the USD/JPY since 17 June 2022.
Interestingly, the bullish momentum of the US dollar's strength was short-lived, and the USD/JPY staged a decline of -2.5% to print an intraday low of 144.92 on Friday, 16 May at the time of writing, which wiped out its initial gains (see Fig 3).
In addition, the price actions of the USD/JPY have reintegrated back below its 50-day moving average and the medium-term descending trendline from its 10 January 2025 swing high, coupled with a bearish momentum condition being flashed out on its daily RSI momentum indicator.
Hence, the rally of 16 May is likely considered a “head fake” failure bullish breakout. Watch the 149.00 key medium-term pivotal resistance (also the key 200-day moving average), and a break below the 144.10 key intermediate support may see further weakness on the USD/JPY to retest 140.30/140.00 medium-term support in the first step before exposing the next medium-term supports at 138.90 and 137.10/136.50.
On the other hand, a clearance above 149.00 invalidates the bearish scenario for a recovery towards the next medium-term resistances at 151.30 and 154.50.
EUR/USD Unchanged Amid Mixed News and Lingering Risks
The EUR/USD pair remained steady near 1.1196 on Friday, closing the week with little movement.
Key drivers influencing EUR/USD
Earlier in the week, the US dollar strengthened as the US-China trade dispute showed signs of easing. However, this optimism was short-lived due to disappointing economic data.
The greenback initially rose by around 1% after Washington and Beijing agreed to reduce tariffs temporarily for 90 days, fuelling hopes of progress toward a broader trade deal. Yet, weak US economic indicators soon dampened sentiment:
- The April producer price index (PPI) fell to 2.4% year-on-year, down from 3.4% and below the forecast of 2.5%
- Month-on-month PPI dropped 0.5%, against expectations of no change
- US retail sales growth slowed sharply to 0.1% in March, following February’s 1.7% surge
- Industrial production stagnated in March after a 0.3% decline in February
These concerning figures have led traders to price in additional Fed rate cuts for 2025.
Technical analysis: EUR/USD
H4 Chart:
The EUR/USD continues to consolidate around 1.1173. A temporary rise to 1.1276 (testing resistance from below) remains possible, but this uptick is considered a corrective phase within the broader downtrend. Once complete, the pair may resume its decline toward 1.0950, this being the first key support level. The MACD indicator confirms this outlook, with its signal line below zero and pointing downward.
H1 Chart:
The pair has already met a local bullish target at 1.12653, followed by a pullback to 1.1170. Today, another test of 1.1276 is plausible, but the broader expectation remains bearish, with a potential drop towards 1.1100. This scenario is reinforced by the Stochastic oscillator, whose signal line is above 80, suggesting an imminent downward reversal towards 20.
Conclusion
The EUR/USD remains range-bound amid mixed fundamentals and technical signals. While a short-term rebound is possible, the dominant downtrend is expected to prevail, with key support levels at 1.0950 (H4) and 1.1100 (H1). Traders should monitor Fed policy expectations and upcoming economic data for further direction.
ETH/USD Rate Rises by Over 40% Since the Start of May
On 7 May, a major upgrade to the Ethereum network — known as Pectra — was successfully implemented. It significantly enhanced the network’s scalability and efficiency, while also improving conditions for ETH stakers.
This triggered a surge in demand for Ethereum, and the ETH/USD rate rose confidently from the $1,800 area to current levels around $2,600.
Can the Ethereum price continue to rise?
Technical Analysis of the ETH/USD Chart
The bearish trendline acting as resistance — which originated at the end of 2024 — was largely driven by increasing competition, for instance from Solana (SOL) and Cardano (ADA). However, the Pectra upgrade has made Ethereum more competitive, resulting in a bullish breakout above the trendline.
On the one hand, recent ETH price movements provide a basis for outlining an upward channel (shown in blue), with the price now approaching the upper boundary, which may act as resistance. This could encourage bulls to take profits, potentially setting the stage for a pullback after the sharp rally.
On the other hand, the rise from $1,800 to $2,300 appears almost uninterrupted. From the perspective of the Smart Money Concept methodology, this area could be seen as a significant bullish Fair Value Gap, where strong demand outweighed supply — suggesting that it may act as support in the event of a pullback.
Given the major improvements to the Ethereum blockchain, it is reasonable to assume that:
- any pullbacks are likely to be shallow;
- demand appears strong enough to support the continued movement of the ETH/USD price within the emerging upward channel.
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Japan and US Data Hit Sentiment, DAX Eyes 24000
Asian Session Market Wrap
A mixed Asian session for stocks as US Futures struggled after the S&P 500 finished with gains of 0.4% on Thursday. It appears early week optimism around the US-China trade deal may be fading. Will potential trade deal announcements reignite risk appetite?
For now though, it appears concerns continue to linger with yesterday's US data not doing much to allay fears that a global slowdown may still be in offing. The picture around consumers and small businesses remains one of concern.
The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index declined 1.6 points in April, to 95.8, its lowest since October 2024. 6 of the 10 index components decreased, with expected business conditions having the most negative contribution.Over the last 4 months, the index has fallen 9.3 points, the sharpest drop since the 2020 pandemic.
At the same time, the share of small firms expecting better business conditions 6 months from now has plummeted 37 percentage points, to 15%, the lowest since October 2024.
In short, despite the US-China 90 day pause, businesses are getting more pessimistic rather than optimistic about the US economy.
Stocks went up in Taiwan, Australia, and South Korea, while they were volatile in Japan and dropped in China. Alibaba Group shares fell as much as 6.7% in Hong Kong after quarterly revenue disappointed.
Adding to the concerns of a global slowdown, Japan's economy shrank for the first time in a year, showing its weakness even before feeling the effects of US President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Finance Minister Katsunobu Kato said he plans to meet with Scott Bessent next week to discuss currency issues he had previously talked about with the US treasury secretary.
All of the above appear to weigh on sentiment as we head into Friday's European session.
Source: LSEG
The European Open
Heading into the European open, Eurozone government bond yields fell on Friday, moving further down from the multi-week highs reached earlier this week.
The DAX continues to advance with modest gains heading into the open. The Index is up 0.2% following yesterday's gains of around 0.9%.
European shares on the whole are bracing for a subdued open though with little data or events scheduled later in the day to provide a clear catalyst.
Gold prices faltered once more, dropping 0.7% to $3,217 an ounce after jumping 2% the night before. Over the week, they’re down by 3.2%.
Oil prices leveled off after dropping over 2% overnight due to news of a possible U.S.-Iran nuclear deal. However, they’re still up 1% for the week thanks to an improved global economic outlook.
On the FX front, traders resumed selling the dollar on Friday, causing it to drop 0.3% against the Japanese yen and 0.2% against the Swiss franc. Meanwhile, the Australian dollar went up 0.4%, and the New Zealand dollar rose 0.5% on the back of rising inflation expectations.
Currency Power Balance
Source: OANDA Labs
Economic Data Releases
Looking at the economic calendar, it is a quiet end to the week for European markets with a sparse calendar. The major market moving event could come in the US session by means of the US Michigan Consumer Sentiment Preliminary release.
This could provide more insight into consumer expectations moving forward and depending on the numbers could either weigh or boost sentiment ahead of the weekend.
For all market-moving economic releases and events, see the MarketPulse Economic Calendar. (click to enlarge)
Chart of the day - DAX
From a technical standpoint, the DAX held support yesterday and closed as a hammer candlestick on the daily timeframe.
Early European session gains position the index favorably for a retest of the 24000 handle and potentially a break higher.
The fading optimism around the US-China trade pause may halt the rally and is something worth monitoring.
The only concern from a technical aspect comes from the period-14 RSI which is in overbought territory.
The Index does need a break and daily candle close beyond 24000 if bulls are to push on and print fresh all-time highs.
Definitely worth monitoring ahead of the weekend.
Immediate Resistance may be found at 24000, 24250 and potentially 24500.
Immediate support rests at 23750, 23471 and 23212 respectively.
DAX Daily Chart, May 16, 2025
Source: TradingView.com (click to enlarge)
ECB’s Kazaks: Interest rates near terminal level of easing cycle
Latvian ECB Governing Council member Martins Kazaks indicated market pricing of a 25bps cut at the June 5 meeting is “relatively appropriate”.
Nevertheless, speaking to CNBC, Kazaks added that inflation developments are "by and large within the baseline scenario". Thus, ECB is “relatively close to the terminal rate” of its easing cycle.
Kazaks' comments argue that ECB may enter a phase of pause after the June rate cut.
Meanwhile, French Governing Council member Francois Villeroy de Galhau, in an interview with a regional French newspapers, acknowledged the risk of a trade war but dismissed the notion that central banks are currently engaged in a currency war.
Villeroy defined a currency war as using interest rates competitively to gain economic advantage. Instead, he said recent currency movements are more reflective of "revisions to economic forecasts."
BoJ’s Nakamura urges caution on rate hikes as economy faces mounting downward pressure
BoJ board member Toyoaki Nakamura, known for his dovish stance, warned that Japan’s economy is under “mounting downward pressure” and cautioned against "rushing" to interest rate hikes.
Speaking today, Nakamura highlighted the risks of tightening policy while growth slows, noting that higher rates could "curb consumption and investment with a lag".
Nakamura also pointed to growing uncertainty stemming from US tariff policy, which he said is already causing Japanese firms to delay or scale back capital spending plans.
He warned that escalating trade tensions could spark a “vicious cycle of lower demand and prices,” undermining both growth and inflation.
GBP/JPY Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 193.17; (P) 194.08; (R1) 194.73; More...
Intraday bias in GBP/JPY remains neutral and more consolidations could be seen below 196.38. Another rally is in favor as long as 190.22 support holds. Firm break of 195.95 will suggest that whole choppy decline from 199.79 has completed, and target this resistance next. However, decisive break of 190.22 will indicate near term reversal and turn bias back to the downside.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 208.09 are seen as a correction to rally from 123.94 (2020 low). Strong support should be seen from 38.2% retracement of 123.94 to 208.09 at 175.94 to contain downside. However, sustained break of 175.94 will bring deeper fall even still as a correction.
EUR/JPY Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 162.32; (P) 163.35; (R1) 163.94; More...
Intraday bias in EUR/JPY remains neutral and some consolidations could be seen below 165.19. Further rally is in favor as long as 161.57 support holds. Above 165.19 will resume the rally from 154.77 to 166.67 resistance. However, firm break of 161.57 will indicate near term reversal, and turn bias back to the downside.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 175.41 are seen as correction to rally from 114.42 (2020 low). Strong support should be seen from 38.2% retracement of 114.42 to 175.41 at 152.11 to contain downside. However, sustained break of 152.11 will bring deeper fall even still as a correction.
EUR/GBP Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 0.8392; (P) 0.8417; (R1) 0.8430; More...
Intraday bias in EUR/GBP remains neutral and more consolidations could be seen above 1.8401. Another fall is expected as long as 0.8539 resistance holds. As noted before, rebound from 0.8221 might have completed as a corrective move. Break of 0.8401 will target retest of 0.8221/8239 support zone.
In the bigger picture, the extended decline from 0.8737 dampened the original bullish view. While a medium term bottom was in place at 0.8221, price actions from there could be a corrective pattern only. Larger down trend from 0.9267 (2022 high) might still be in progress. Sustained trading below 55 W EMA (now at 0.8438) will turn favor to this bearish case.

















