On Friday I expected to see AUDJPY and AUDUSD to turn north, but they did not follow through. They were at a decision level and had much more room to rise structurally than to fall. But that does not negate the fact that there is still a bit of room below, and at this point, there is no denying that they are both presently bearish.
(Statistically speaking, if AUDUSD should happen to drop as low as 80.39, the amount of pressure compelling it to rise should be astronomically intense!)
CADJPY turned north on Friday, as anticipated.
It was a mistake (a bit premature) to count on EURAUD heading south from 1.5781, as the newly added moving average clarifies. Nonetheless, the numbers suggest it will be under great pressure to turn south should it climb as high as 1.5897, and astronomical pressure to do so at 1.5983.
The currently bullish, EURGBP has been more-or-less range bound for perhaps a little more than two weeks. Until it changes this pattern, bullish or not, 0.8962 is a neighborhood from which to sell, and 0.8851 is an approximate level from which to buy.
EURJPY appears to be sidewinding its way nowhere. At this time, I have no interest in fooling around with this pair.
EURUSD is slightly bullish at the moment. If it intends to remain so, Friday’s closing rate of 1.1374 might have been a nice spot from which to enter a long position.
Unless it begins trending, GBPJPY is a buy around 142.90 and a sell around 144.92. Similarly, GBPUSD is a buy around 1.2676 and a sell around 1.2852.
Having reached a decision level on Friday, I was thinking NZDJPY would turn north, but for the time being at least, it has turned south instead. The same is true of NZDUSD.
USDCAD turned south Friday, as anticipated.
USDCHF is still decidedly bearish, so the next pullback should present a nice opportunity to enter a short position.
USDJPY is not trending strongly at all. In fact, the pair looks very ambivalent.