Forex Update

Crude Daily Commentary for 3.18.09

Crude futures continued their impressive climb after jumping above our 2nd tier trend line, but backed away from the highly psychological $50/bbl level as anticipated. January 26 highs are intact for the time being and are the only obstacle, a weak one at that, preventing crude from challenging 2009 highs.

The S&P futures are on a roll, always a strong catalyst to send crude prices higher due to improved expectations concerning production and consequently consumption of energy. However, whether crude rises through $50/bbl and runs towards $55/bbl will depend on the weekly crude oil inventory report coming today.

Gold Daily Commentary for 3.18.09

Gold continues to drift downward, sliding below our 2nd tier uptrend line. However, the precious metal has yet to make a drastic move to the downside considering the furious rally taking place on Wall Street.

Therefore, investors continue to display reluctance in dropping gold below our 3rd tier downtrend line and the highly psychological $900/oz level. Therefore, the uptrend lives to see another day.

On the other hand, if the precious metal should sink below the previously mentioned critical fundamental supports, we would expect a heightened near-term selloff.

Fundamentally, our $922.92/oz support turns resistance while we hold our resistances of $928.57/oz, $932.04/oz, and $932.42/oz.

EUR/USD Daily Commentary for 3.18.09

The EUR/USD is still battling with March highs while jammed in the 1.30 zone. The Euro is enjoying relative strength against the Dollar and Pound after Germany's economic sentiment came in better than analyst expectations.

The EUR/GBP is breaking out to the upside in reaction to horrible economic data from Britain. However, we feel yesterday's consumer sentiment data may be a lagging indicator considering Germany showed production fell off a cliff last week.

GBP/USD Daily Commentary for 3.18.09

Sure enough the Cable crumbled after dropping below the psychological 1.40 cushion yet is bouncing off our previous bottom-end of 1.3856. The weakness comes after a slew of negative news concerning Britain.

To get started, the IMF projected the British economy will not turn around until 2011, highlighting the severity of the situation. The Claimant Count Change (CCC) number leaves us speechless. Not only did Britain revise the last CCC number upwards, but today's release is disastrous at best.

The CCC came in at roughly 138,400 compared to analyst estimates of 84,500. Hence, British unemployment is rising at an accelerated rate, blowing past even the worst-case expectations.

USD/JPY Daily Commentary for 3.18.09

Not much has changed in the USD/JPY with the consolidation process dragging on. The sideways movement of the USD/JPY over the last three weeks signifies the relevance of the psychological 100 level. Investors are still reluctant to test it, indicating they haven't bought into a bottom in U. S. equities yet.

While the Japanese economy is incredibly weak, America's certainly isn't putting on a stellar performance. Therefore, if the U. S. economy continues to shell out more negative economic data the USD/JPY should continue its consolidation or possibly make a large movement south.

EURO USD Forex Trading Tips and Analysis for Day Traders

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