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Yen Gains, Franc Sinks, Risk Appetite Recovers Cautiously
Markets are recovering modestly at the start of the week after last week’s sharp risk-off move. European equities are inching higher, and US futures point to a positive open. While sentiment appears to be improving, the backdrop remains fragile, as reflected in the continued slide in global bond yields, a signal that some investors are still seeking safety.
Yen is among the better performers today, drawing strength from falling yields and lingering caution. Sterling is also relatively firm, supported by weakness in both Euro and Franc. Sterling may face its own test later this week when the Bank of England meets, but for now it is benefiting from cross-asset flows.
Meanwhile, Swiss Franc sits at the bottom of the FX board despite Swiss CPI slightly beating expectations, offering no support to the currency. Euro is not faring much better. Sentix Investor Confidence data painted a grim picture of investor sentiment toward the EU-US trade deal. Dollar remains soft, with attempts to rebound proving shallow so far. Commodity currencies are mixed in the middle.
On the trade front, Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba told the parliament today he is ready have to direct talks with US President Donald Trump to accelerate the implementation of the US auto tariff reduction. Although the deal was struck last month, cutting tariffs on Japanese goods including cars, the timeline remains vague. Trade Minister Akazawa also said in the same session that even under favorable conditions, implementation could take more than a month, as seen in the UK's case.
In Europe, at the time of writing, FTSE is up 0.46%. DAX is up 1.44%. CAC is up 0.99%. UK 10-year yield is down -0.21 at 4.509. Germany 10-year yield is down -0.031 at 2.649. Earlier in Asia, Nikkei fell -1.25%. Hong Kong HSI rose 0.92%. China Shanghai SSE rose 0.66%. Singapore Strait Times rose 1.04%. Japan 10-year JGB yield fell -0.041 to 1.511.
Eurozone Sentix sentiment crashes to -3.7, investors reject US-EU trade deal
Investor confidence in the Eurozone took a sharp hit in August, with Sentix Investor Confidence Index plunging from 4.5 to -3.7, well below expectations of 6.2. Current Situation Index dropped further into negative territory, falling from -7.3 to -13.0. Expectations Index fell steeply from 17.0 to 6.0. Germany’s figures were even more troubling: the overall index dropped from -0.4 to -12.8, with the Current Situation down from -18.8 to -29.0 and Expectations collapsing from 19.8 to 5.0.
According to Sentix, the sentiment collapse reflects investors’ early judgment of the EU-US tariff deal — and the assessment is "devastating." The agreement, instead of offering clarity or relief, has triggered renewed concerns about Eurozone export sectors. Recent optimism about Germany’s recovery is now in doubt, with export-oriented industries seen facing more pressure in the months ahead. Investors are also increasingly anxious about rising government debt across the bloc.
Adding to the gloom, inflation shows no signs of easing. Sentix’s inflation theme index fell to -11.75, reinforcing the view that the ECB has limited room to ease policy further. With sentiment deteriorating, debt concerns mounting, and no clear inflation relief in sight, the Eurozone’s path to recovery looks increasingly fragile.
Swiss CPI beats forecast, easing pressure on SNB to go negative
Swiss CPI came in firmer than expected in July, with headline inflation unchanged mom versus forecasts of a -0.2% mom decline. Core CPI — which excludes fresh and seasonal products, energy, and fuel — fell slightly by -0.1% mom, while domestic product prices rose 0.2% mom and imported product prices dropped -0.9% mom.
On an annual basis, headline CPI ticked up to 0.2% yoy from 0.1% yoy, also ahead of the 0.1% yoy forecast. Core CPI accelerated from 0.6% yoy to 0.8% y/y yoy. Domestic product inflation remained steady at 0.7% yoy, while imported product prices, although still negative, improved from -1.9% yoy to -1.4% yoy.
Today’s data modestly ease concerns that Switzerland is slipping back into outright deflation. There has been persistent speculation that the SNB might resume negative interest rates following a series of cuts that brought the policy rate back to 0.00%. But July’s inflation uptick may buy policymakers time ahead of the next meeting on September 25.
In the background, the slight weakening in Swiss Franc, as global markets stabilize and trade tensions ease, helps reduce deflationary pressure. If August CPI data show further improvement, expectations will likely shift toward a steady hold in September rather than another policy adjustment.
GBP/CAD faces dual event risk of BoE and Canadian job
GBP/CAD could see heightened volatility this week as two key events take center stage: BoE rate decision on Thursday and Canadian employment data on Friday.
A 25bps BoE cut is widely expected as part of its measured easing cycle, but the decision may not be smooth. In May, the MPC vote split a rare three ways, with two members backing a larger cut and two pushing for no change. In June, Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden joined the dovish camp. But with inflation unexpectedly accelerating, some policymakers may reverse course. That raises the odds of a more contentious outcome, potentially sparking a reaction in GBP crosses.
Canadian Dollar, meanwhile, will look the July jobs report for direction. BoC has left rates unchanged for three straight meetings and hinted it may cut only if weakness persists. June’s robust job data — 83.1k positions added and a dip in unemployment to 6.9% — gives the BoC space to stay on hold for longer. A solid print this week would reinforce that view.
Technically, GBP/CAD remains under pressure as decline from 1.8830 continues. Momentum has slowed, as seen in 4H MACD, but there’s no clear sign of a bottom yet. The decline is seen as the third leg of the corrective pattern from 1.8777, and further dip toward 1.7980 cannot be ruled out. On the other hand, firm break above 1.8484 would suggest the fall is over and open a move back toward 1.8830.
USD/JPY Mid-Day Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 146.17; (P) 148.54; (R1) 149.80; More...
USD/JPY dips mildly today but stays well above 145.84 support. Intraday bias stays neutral first. Rebound from 139.87 could still extend higher. Above 150.90 will target 151.22 fibonacci level. However, on the downside, firm break of 145.84 support will argue that whole rise from 139.87 might have already completed. Deeper fall should then be seen to 142.66 support for confirmation.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 161.94 (2024 high) are seen as a corrective pattern to rise from 102.58 (2021 low). Decisive break of 61.8% retracement of 158.86 to 139.87 at 151.22 will argue that it has already completed with three waves at 139.87. Larger up trend might then be ready to resume through 161.94 high. In case the corrective pattern extends with another fall, strong support is expected from 38.2% retracement of 102.58 to 161.94 at 139.26 to bring rebound.
USD INDEX – Bears Take a Breather After Fridays Sharp Fall
The dollar index edged higher on Monday morning after losing almost 1.5% on Friday (the biggest daily loss since Apr 10).
Disappointing US NFP data in July and strong downward revision of previous month’s figure, as well as higher unemployment, send warning signals to the Fed and revive the scenario about rate cut in September (and probably one more until the end of the year) which US policymakers just sidelined on Wednesday’s policy meeting.
Friday’s sharp fall (emerged after failure at 100 psychological barrier) closed within falling and thickening daily Ichimoku cloud and hit 50% retracement of recent strong rally (96.82/100.04) that generated negative signal.
Fresh bears found temporary footstep at 50% retracement / daily Tenkan-sen, with today’s (so far limited) bounce, partially offsetting immediate downside risk.
Near-term action may keep in directionless mode while holding within the cloud (spanned between 98.00 and 99.00) with violation of either cloud boundary, to generate stronger direction signal.
On the longer run, dollar’s outlook is likely to remain negative, as larger downtrend is still intact after last week’s strong upside rejection (weekly candle with long upper shadow) and predominantly bearish weekly studies.
Apart from growing signals of more dovish Fed’s stance in coming months, doubts about the strength of the US economy (after strong disappointment from NFP) and rising political uncertainty would further boost demand for gold and increase pressure on dollar.
Res: 98.81; 99.08; 99.28; 99.72
Sup: 98.36; 98.03; 97.58; 97.22
GBP/CAD faces dual event risk of BoE and Canadian job
GBP/CAD could see heightened volatility this week as two key events take center stage: BoE rate decision on Thursday and Canadian employment data on Friday.
A 25bps BoE cut is widely expected as part of its measured easing cycle, but the decision may not be smooth. In May, the MPC vote split a rare three ways, with two members backing a larger cut and two pushing for no change. In June, Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden joined the dovish camp. But with inflation unexpectedly accelerating, some policymakers may reverse course. That raises the odds of a more contentious outcome, potentially sparking a reaction in GBP crosses.
Canadian Dollar, meanwhile, will look the July jobs report for direction. BoC has left rates unchanged for three straight meetings and hinted it may cut only if weakness persists. June’s robust job data — 83.1k positions added and a dip in unemployment to 6.9% — gives the BoC space to stay on hold for longer. A solid print this week would reinforce that view.
Technically, GBP/CAD remains under pressure as decline from 1.8830 continues. Momentum has slowed, as seen in 4H MACD, but there’s no clear sign of a bottom yet. The decline is seen as the third leg of the corrective pattern from 1.8777, and further dip toward 1.7980 cannot be ruled out. On the other hand, firm break above 1.8484 would suggest the fall is over and open a move back toward 1.8830.
Bitcoin Tests Support at 50-Day MA
Market Overview
The crypto market rolled back at the end of last week following a reduction in risk appetite in the financial markets. However, on Sunday, sentiment changed with the return of active buyers near the total capitalisation of $3.60 trillion. At the time of writing, the market is at $3.73 trillion (+3.6%). Less than 10% of the top 100 coins show gains over 7 days, among which the largest are TRON (+2.2%) and TON (+4.5%).
The crypto market sentiment index fell to 53 by Sunday morning, a six-week low, but recovered to 64 on Monday, reflecting a resurgence of bullish sentiment. However, another impressive upward move will be needed to confirm a local victory for the bulls.
On Saturday and Sunday, Bitcoin received support from buyers on declines below $112K near the 50-day moving average – the fourth touch of this curve since April. On the “buy the dip” sentiment, the first cryptocurrency recovered to $115K on Monday morning. The rebound from support is a bullish signal for the next couple of days, but the fact that it has been tested frequently raises concerns for the medium term.
News Background
According to SoSoValue, net outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs in the US amounted to $812.3 million on August 1, the highest since February 25. As a result, the weekly outflow from BTC ETFs amounted to $643 million, a record high for the past 16 weeks.
The net outflow from spot Ethereum ETFs in the US on Friday amounted to $152.3 million. However, inflows in the previous days of the week managed to keep the indicator in positive territory (+$154.3 million). The positive trend has continued for 12 consecutive weeks.
Analyst Ali Martinez says that over the past two days, Bitcoin whales have bought 30,000 BTC. According to Santiment, over the past four months, whales with balances ranging from 10 to 10,000 BTC have accumulated 0.9% of the total coin supply.
According to The Block, trading volume on centralised crypto exchanges exceeded $1.7 trillion in July (the highest since February 2025), and trading volume on decentralised exchanges (DEX) also reached its highest level since January.
Galaxy Digital warned of risks in the public company sector, which accumulates cryptocurrencies by issuing shares. The model creates systemic vulnerability and could lead to a cascade collapse.
US SEC Chairman Paul Atkins announced Project Crypto. The project’s key objective is to establish clear rules for cryptocurrencies and turn the US into the “world’s crypto capital.”
Dow Jones Technical: Minor Pull-Back Found Support With Bullish Elements Sighted in Caterpillar
Since the medium-term swing low on 7 April 2025, triggered by the US Liberation Day tariff announcement, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has underperformed compared to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.
So far, the US Wall Street 30 CFD Index (a proxy of the Dow Jones Industrial Average futures) has not yet broken above its current all-time high of 45,100 printed in December 2024 after a retest of it last Monday, 28 July, versus fresh all-time highs seen on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.
Caterpillar’s ex-post earnings price actions may drive Dow Jones
Let’s examine the Dow Jones Industrial Average from a technical analysis perspective within a short-term time horizon (1 to 3 days), coupled with an inter-market analysis of Caterpillar (CAT), the third biggest weightage component stock of the DJIA (6%) as its Q2 earnings release will be out on Tuesday, 5 August before the US market opens.
Fig. 1: US Wall Street 30 CFD Index minor trend as of 4 Aug 2025 (Source: TradingView)
Fig. 2: Caterpillar medium-term trend as of 4 Aug 2025 (Source: TradingView)
Preferred trend bias (1-3 days)
The five-day minor corrective decline of the US Wall Street 30 CFD Index since the 28 July high of 45,146 is likely to have reached an exhaustion zone after last Friday, 1 August’s intraday sell-off triggered by the weaker-than-expected US non-farm payroll print for July.
Bullish bias above 43,600/43,475 key short-term pivotal support and a clearance above 43,920 may reinforce a potential minor recovery towards the next intermediate resistances at 44,250/44,390 and 44,780 (see Fig. 1).
Key elements
- The -4% minor corrective decline of the US Wall Street 30 CFD Index has stalled right at the 50-day moving average and the 50% Fibonacci retracement of prior bullish impulsive up move from 17 June 2025 low to 28 July 2025 high. Its confluence zone is defined as 43,600/43,475.
- The hourly RSI momentum indicator has flashed out a bullish divergence condition at its oversold region on last Friday, 1 August, before a bullish breakout above a parallel descending trendline resistance seen in today’s Asia session. These observations suggest last Friday’s downside momentum has eased.
- Caterpillar has also managed to hold right at its 20-day moving average support of 416.88, which confluences with the medium-term ascending channel support from the 7 April 2025 low. In addition, the daily Chaikin Money Flow Index (price momentum with volume) has managed to exhibit bullish momentum conditions above 0.21( a parallel support) (see Fig. 2).
Alternative trend bias (1 to 3 days)
Failure to hold at 43,475 invalidates the bullish scenario for an extension of the minor corrective decline towards the next supports at 43,170 and 42,860 (the key 200-day moving average and the medium-term ascending trendline from 23 May 2025 low).
Yen Weakens Amid Fed Rate Expectations and Bank of Japan Signals
The USD/JPY pair climbed to 147.67 on Monday as the Japanese yen underwent a correction following Friday’s volatile trading session, with investors closely monitoring macroeconomic developments.
Market focus remains on shifting US Federal Reserve policy expectations after the release of softer labour market data. Although Friday’s report bolstered predictions of a rate cut, Fed officials have maintained a cautious tone, citing persistent inflation risks. Proposed large-scale tariffs from US President Donald Trump have further amplified these concerns.
Against this backdrop, the US dollar has partially regained strength, exerting downward pressure on the yen.
Investors are now awaiting the release of the Bank of Japan (BoJ) meeting minutes, hoping for clues on the timing of a potential rate hike. Last week, the Japanese central bank left interest rates unchanged but raised its inflation forecast and highlighted growing uncertainty due to global trade risks.
Overall, the outlook for the JPY remains subdued. The BoJ has ample room to delay rate hikes, justifying its stance with ongoing caution.
Technical Analysis: USD/JPY
H4 Chart:
On the H4 chart, USD/JPY completed an upward wave to 150.90 before entering a correction phase. A further decline towards 146.52 is anticipated today. Once this level is reached, the pair may initiate a new growth wave, potentially targeting 151.00, with a longer-term prospect of extending the trend to 153.10. This scenario is supported by the MACD indicator, where the signal line remains above zero but is trending sharply downward.
H1 Chart:
On the H1 chart, USD/JPY is forming a corrective structure towards 146.52. A temporary rebound to 148.70 (testing from below) is expected today, followed by a possible resumption of the correction to 146.52. Once this correction concludes, a fresh upward wave towards 151.00 could materialise. The Stochastic oscillator validates this outlook, with its signal line positioned above 50 and pointing upwards.
Conclusion
The yen remains under pressure amid shifting Fed expectations and cautious BoJ signals. Technically, USD/JPY is poised for further correction before potentially resuming its uptrend.
Eurozone Sentix sentiment crashes to -3.7, investors reject US-EU trade deal
Investor confidence in the Eurozone took a sharp hit in August, with Sentix Investor Confidence Index plunging from 4.5 to -3.7, well below expectations of 6.2. Current Situation Index dropped further into negative territory, falling from -7.3 to -13.0. Expectations Index fell steeply from 17.0 to 6.0. Germany’s figures were even more troubling: the overall index dropped from -0.4 to -12.8, with the Current Situation down from -18.8 to -29.0 and Expectations collapsing from 19.8 to 5.0.
According to Sentix, the sentiment collapse reflects investors’ early judgment of the EU-US tariff deal — and the assessment is "devastating." The agreement, instead of offering clarity or relief, has triggered renewed concerns about Eurozone export sectors. Recent optimism about Germany’s recovery is now in doubt, with export-oriented industries seen facing more pressure in the months ahead. Investors are also increasingly anxious about rising government debt across the bloc.
Adding to the gloom, inflation shows no signs of easing. Sentix’s inflation theme index fell to -11.75, reinforcing the view that the ECB has limited room to ease policy further. With sentiment deteriorating, debt concerns mounting, and no clear inflation relief in sight, the Eurozone’s path to recovery looks increasingly fragile.
US Dollar Index (DXY) Plummets Following Labour Market Data
The US Dollar Index (DXY) fell by approximately 1.4% on Friday after the release of disappointing US labour market figures. According to Forex Factory:
→ The unemployment rate rose from 4.1% to 4.2%;
→ The Nonfarm Employment Change figure came in at 73K, well below the forecast of 103K. This is the lowest level of job creation in the nonfarm sector in 2025 and is roughly half the previous month’s reading (prior to revisions).
→ Furthermore, revisions for May and June were significantly more severe than usual. The May figure was revised downward by 125,000 — from +144,000 to +19,000. Similarly, the June figure was revised down by 133,000 — from +147,000 to +14,000.
These results point to a weakening labour market, which increases the likelihood of a rate cut aimed at supporting economic growth. In turn, expectations of a Fed rate cut are acting as a bearish driver for the US dollar.
Technical Analysis of the DXY Chart
Six days ago, we highlighted two U-shaped trajectories (A and B), which together formed a bullish сup and рandle pattern on the US Dollar Index chart.
Following this, price action generated a notable upward impulse (as indicated by the arrow), breaking through the upper boundary of the pattern.
However, Friday’s news triggered the following developments:
→ A new top (4) was formed on the chart, accompanied by a false bullish breakout above the psychological level of 100.00;
→ The price declined to the 98.80 area. The downward move slowed here, as this zone had previously seen strong bullish activity during the breakout from the pattern’s upper boundary — likely explaining why the market is finding support here on Monday morning.
Overall, the technical picture has shifted towards a bearish outlook. Friday’s peak continues the summer sequence of lower highs and lows: 1 → 2 → bottom of pattern (A) → 4. This structure is part of a broader downtrend that has defined the market in 2025.
Should bearish sentiment persist, fuelled by Friday’s data, we can assume a further decline in the US Dollar Index towards the median line of the descending channel (shown in red), which has been drawn through the aforementioned price extremes.
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EUR/USD Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.1454; (P) 1.1526; (R1) 1.1659; More...
Intraday bias in EUR/USD stays on the upside for the moment. Correction from 1.1829 could have completed with three waves down to 1.1390 already. Further rise should be seen to retest 1.1788/1820 resistance zone. On the downside, break of 1.1390 will resume the correction to 38.2% retracement of 1.0176 to 1.1829 at 1.1198 instead.
In the bigger picture, rise from 0.9534 long term bottom could be correcting the multi-decade downtrend or the start of a long term up trend. In either case, further rise should be seen to 100% projection of 0.9534 to 1.1274 from 1.0176 at 1.1916. This will remain the favored case as long as 1.1604 support holds.
USD/JPY Daily Outlook
Daily Pivots: (S1) 146.17; (P) 148.54; (R1) 149.80; More...
Intraday bias in USD/JPY remains neutral for the moment. Rebound from 139.87 could still extend high as long as 145.84 support holds. Above 150.90 will target 151.22 fibonacci level. However, on the downside, firm break of 145.84 support will argue that whole rise from 139.87 might have already completed. Deeper fall should then be seen to 142.66 support for confirmation.
In the bigger picture, price actions from 161.94 (2024 high) are seen as a corrective pattern to rise from 102.58 (2021 low). Decisive break of 61.8% retracement of 158.86 to 139.87 at 151.22 will argue that it has already completed with three waves at 139.87. Larger up trend might then be ready to resume through 161.94 high. In case the corrective pattern extends with another fall, strong support is expected from 38.2% retracement of 102.58 to 161.94 at 139.26 to bring rebound.

















