The difference between success and failure in Forex trading is very likely to depend upon which currency pairs you choose to trade each week, and not on the exact trading methods you might use to determine trade entries and exits. Each week I am going to analyze fundamentals, sentiment and technical positions in order to determine which currency pairs are most likely to produce the easiest and most profitable trading opportunities over the next week. In some cases it will be trading the trend. In other cases it will be trading support and resistance levels during more ranging markets.

Big Picture 8th November 2015

This week I have no hesitation in saying that the best opportunities are likely to be following momentum, as we now have one currency that is clearly strong and two or three others that are clearly weak. Looking to long the strong currency against the weaker currencies is probably going to be a good strategy.

Fundamental Analysis & Market Sentiment

The strong currency is the USD. The fundamental data could be stronger, but just last week we had the Federal Reserve signaling that a rate hike in December is more likely than not to happen. Market sentiment has moved from a belief that there is about a 1 in 3 chance of such a rate hike happening, to a belief that it is more likely than not. This was then followed on Friday by a really strong NFP data release that was the strongest number for years and was far in excess of the market’s expectations. The position technically for the USD also looks strong. The currency rose across the board following both of these events, and is now trading higher than it was 3 months ago against every major global currency.

Weaker currencies are a little less clear but there are four that stand out: the CHF, GBP, AUD and EUR. Let’s take each currency in turn.

Swiss fundamentals are neutral. However there is a feeling that the “real” Swiss economy has been in trouble for a while, and the SNB wants to see the CHF fall in value to make Swiss exports more competitive. One tool to achieve this was setting a negative interest rate of 0.75%. This negative rate combines with the gloomy economic sentiment to produce a currency that feels weak.

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