Join our community of traders FOR FREE!

  • Learn
  • Improve yourself
  • Get Rewards
Learn More

USD/CHF has been holding well above the 25-day (blue), the 50-day (red) and the 200-day (white) Exponential Moving Averages since February 27th, when the cross received support at the 50-day EMA. In early March the up move accelerated even more, with the Average Directional Index surging above its 50.00 level, which led to the cross marking a prominent high at 1.0131 on March 12th. On the following trading day (March 13th) the pair made an attempt to test that high, but it was unsuccessful, which bolstered the case that a trading range was probably at hand. A lower high at 1.0112 (the yellow line) was recorded, after which a rejection took place and the cross retreated to the downside, forming the lower portion of the range. On March 17th there was a breakout attempt from the lower boundary of the trading range, but it failed. On the next day, however, first, a breakout to the downside from a tight three-bar range occurred, followed by another test of the lower boundary of the larger range and, finally, a successful breakout below 1.0000 took place (the green line on the 4-hour chart below).

1

The large bear-trend bar with an extended lower wick reflected a drop to the first prominent low since early March at 0.9626, a move triggered by the Federal Reserves most recent policy decision to keep its benchmark rate on hold for a 49th consecutive meeting. This move also marked the first of the five ”bearish steps”, which followed all the way down to the most recent prominent low of 0.9484 on March 26th. A two-bar bullish reversal took place. Next, a second bullish spike drove the pair to the 25-day EMA, where it seemed to have encountered resistance. Another tight three-bar range followed, which suggested that a significant move was on the horizon. A breakout to the upside did occur and USD/CHF pierced the 25-day and the 200-day EMA on March 27th.

From this point on, USD/CHF may find resistance at the 38.2% Fibonacci level (0.9731). If the up move continues beyond it, we have a reason to expect that this move may be halted within the area between 38.2% and 61.8% Fibonacci levels. If, however, the pair goes beyond the 61.8% level, it is probably not retracing a portion of the prior down move, but making a new bullish one.

2

If we take a look at the larger time frame (the daily chart above), we can see that the above mentioned bearish move was a retracement to a significant up move. The retracement ended in the area between the 23.6% and the 38.2% Fibonacci levels. In addition, the three EMAs still remain in a ”perfect order” (the 25-day EMA is on top and the 200-day EMA is at the bottom), indicating the bullish move has a room to run. If taking into consideration the Average Directional Index, the DI+ (green) has been below the DI- (red) for some time and the gap between them is poised to be narrowed. At the same time, the ADX remains above its key 25.00 level. The March 26th bar represented a Hammer (bullish single-bar reversal pattern), which appeared close to a prior zone of support, thus, fueling the case of an up move. The next and last bar on the chart (March 27th) was a narrow-range one and its high was higher than that of the previous bar. In case we witness a break above the high of the March 27th narrow-range bar in the upcoming week, we have a reason to expect a considerable move up.

If the up move indeed continues, there is a chance that it may try to test the March 12th high at 1.0131. In case the latter is broken, USD/CHF may even attempt to test the next prominent high, which occurred on January 15th – 1.0221 (the white line on the daily chart).

The bullish move will certainly be bolstered, if a series of positive macroeconomic reports come out from the United States in the upcoming month, and especially if the Federal Reserve Bank introduces a rate hike at some of its upcoming policy meetings.

TradingPedia.com is a financial media specialized in providing daily news and education covering Forex, equities and commodities. Our academies for traders cover Forex, Price Action and Social Trading.

Related News

  • Forex Market: USD/JPY daily trading forecastForex Market: USD/JPY daily trading forecast Yesterday’s trade saw USD/JPY within the range of 123.65-124.20. The pair closed at 123.92, down 0.04% on a daily basis. The daily high has also been the highest level since July 21st, when the cross registered a high of 124.50.At 7:40 GMT […]
  • Binary Tribune’s Commodity Trading Signals for October 17th 2016Binary Tribune’s Commodity Trading Signals for October 17th 2016 Silver for December delivery: Buy just above $17.363, TP1 - $17.467, TP2 - $17.493, TP3 - $17.519, SL - just below $17.284.Sell just below $17.519, TP1 - $17.415, TP2 – $17.389, TP3 - $17.363, SL - just above $17.598.If break and […]
  • Soft futures mixed, sugar eases off four-week highSoft futures mixed, sugar eases off four-week high Soft futures were mixed on Monday with cotton and cocoa advancing, while coffee fell and sugar eased off a four-week high.On the ICE Futures U.S. Exchange, raw sugar for October delivery traded at $0.1691 a pound at 12:56 GMT, down 0.24% […]
  • Silver rebounds after Friday’s plungeSilver rebounds after Friday’s plunge Silver rebounded and tracked golds upward direction on Monday after plunging more than 4% on Friday as positive U.S. labor data spurred concern the Federal Reserve will wind down its bond purchasing program.On the Comex division of the New […]
  • Gold trading outlook: futures hold above six-week low on Greece worriesGold trading outlook: futures hold above six-week low on Greece worries Gold edged up on Wednesday to trade above the lowest in six weeks as equities gained some ground on increasing speculation that Greece will request an extension on its bailout deal.Comex gold for delivery in April gained 0.06% to $1 209.3 […]
  • Crude oil trading outlook: futures extend drop on oversupply, subdued manufacturingCrude oil trading outlook: futures extend drop on oversupply, subdued manufacturing West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude slid to the lowest in more than 5-1/2 years amid growing supplies from Iraq and Russia, while manufacturing activity figures from China and Europe pointed to weakness, exacerbating concerns of a global […]