[EUR/USD] Tariffs on the EU
At the beginning of the week, the euro fell to 1.0211 because of concerns that the Trump administration might impose tariffs on the EU, along with Mexico and Canada. Later, …
A clear explanation of daily buying and selling points. This is a summary of the author’s own market views, and final decisions regarding actual investments and trading should be made at your own discretion.
Updated daily
At the beginning of the week, the euro fell to 1.0211 because of concerns that the Trump administration might impose tariffs on the EU, along with Mexico and Canada. Later, …
At the beginning of the week, the U.S. dollar rose to 155.88 yen after the Trump administration decided to impose a 25% tariff on Mexico and Canada. However, when Japan’s …
The Trump administration decided last weekend to impose a 25% tariff on Mexico and Canada. Because of this, gold prices fell at the beginning of the week. However, when news …
The Bank of England (BOE) is expected to lower interest rates by 0.25% this week for the first time in two meetings. In December, UK inflation (CPI and RPI) slowed …
The U.S. dollar rose after President Trump placed tariffs on Canada and Mexico. Many expected some adjustments or delays, so this was a surprise. However, future negotiations may still change …
Last week, gold reached a new highest price and increased by more than $200 in just one month. The U.S. government, under Trump, placed a 25% tariff on Mexico and …
Before the European Central Bank (ECB) meeting, Germany and the Eurozone’s GDP (October–December) were lower than expected. This caused the euro to weaken, and EUR/USD dropped to 1.0391. As expected, …
The recent U.S. Federal Reserve (FOMC) meeting had a slightly strong stance on interest rates, but the U.S. dollar did not rise much. In the Tokyo market, end-of-month yen buying …
Yesterday, the European Central Bank (ECB) decided to cut interest rates by 0.25%. This made gold more attractive because gold does not pay interest. As a result, gold prices went …
Yesterday, Australia’s October–December CPI was 2.4%, lower than the expected 2.5%.At the same time, the trimmed mean CPI was 0.5%, the lowest since mid-2021. Because of this, the Australian dollar …