GBPUSD Forecast July 29, 2014, Technical Analysis
The GBPUSD pair went back and forth during the day on Monday, but found the 1.70 level to be resistive enough to keep the market somewhat down.
The GBPUSD pair went back and forth during the day on Monday, but found the 1.70 level to be resistive enough to keep the market somewhat down.
The EURUSD pair fell again during the session on Friday, breaking the bottom of the candle from the Thursday session, showing us that the market should continue to go lower.
GBPUSD stays below the downward trend line on 4-hour chart, and remains in downtrend from 1.7190.
AUDUSD has been making higher lows and finding resistance at the .9460 area, creating an ascending triangle on its 4-hour time frame.
The EURUSD pair went back and forth during the session on Thursday, essentially settling nothing as we printed a neutral candle.
The USDCAD pair initially fell during the session on Thursday, but found enough support at the 1.07 region to turn things back around and form a hammer. Will we find particularly interesting about this market is that it seems so well supported, even as oil prices went so much higher during the day.
The AUDUSD pair tried to break out to the upside during the session on Thursday, but as you can see failed out the 0.9450 area, and as a result we turned back around to form a shooting star.
The GBPUSD pair fell hard during the day on Thursday, slicing through the 1.70 support region. However, there’s still plenty of support all the way down to the 1.69 level, so we do not feel it’s quite ready to be sold yet. In fact, we would be more than willing to buy a supportive candle in this region as it should send the market back to the 1.72 region.
The EURUSD pair initially tried to rally during the session on Wednesday, but as you can see turned back around and close towards the end of the day, forming a negative looking candle.
The GBPUSD pair initially tried to rally during the session on Wednesday, but with the Bank of England failing to impress upon the market a bit of a drive to tighten monetary policy, the British pound was in fact sold off later in the day.