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  • USDCHF Technical Analysis: The market is now solely focused on US-China headlines

    Fundamental
    Overview

    The USD came under some
    pressure on Friday as the risk-off sentiment caused by Trump’s threat of
    substantially increasing tariffs on China weighed on Treasury yields. Over the
    weekend, we had more soothing comments from Trump and other US officials which
    triggered a recovery in risk sentiment.

    The positive mood weighed a
    bit on the greenback but eventually the risk mood deteriorated again as US
    Treasury Secretary Bessent poured some cold water on the weekend hype and the
    Chinese imposed special port fees on US related vessels as countermeasures
    against the US previous port fees.

    Domestically, nothing has
    changed for the US dollar as the US government shutdown continues to delay many
    key US economic reports. The dollar “repricing trade” needs strong US data to
    keep going, especially on the labour market side, so any hiccup on that front
    is likely to keep weighing on the greenback.

    The market pricing shifted
    more dovish after the latest US-China escalation with 48 bps of easing by
    year-end and 122 bps cumulatively by the end of 2026. The BLS announced last
    week that despite the shutdown, it will release the US CPI report on October
    24, so that’s going to be a key risk event.

    In case we get hot data, we
    will likely see a hawkish repricing in interest rates expectations with the
    December cut being priced out. Conversely, a soft report shouldn’t change much
    in terms of pricing, but it will likely weigh on the greenback anyway. This
    will of course be taken in context of the US-China relations by then.

    On the CHF side, nothing
    has changed. The SNB left interest rates steady and kept everything unchanged
    at the last meeting. SNB’s President Schlegel didn’t offer any forward guidance
    but he did say that the bar to cut rates further is very high and negative
    inflation prints in the short-term won’t be enough.

    The last Swiss inflation
    prints rebounded a bit but there’s a long way to go before breaching their 2% inflation
    limit. So, this leaves the CHF trading mostly based on the risk sentiment.

    USDCHF
    Technical Analysis – Daily Timeframe

    On the daily chart, we can
    see that USDCHF broke above the major downward trendline last week and extended the
    rally into the 0.8075 level before pulling back a bit and then selling off on
    Trump’s escalation. We can see that we have a major upward trendline now
    defining the bullish momentum. The buyers will likely lean on the trendline with
    a defined risk below it to position for a rally into the 0.8171 level. The
    sellers, on the other hand, will look for a break lower to extend the drop into
    the 0.7871 level next.

    USDCHF Technical
    Analysis – 4 hour Timeframe

    On the 4 hour chart, we can
    see more clearly the recent price action. Again, the buyers will have a better
    risk to reward setup around the trendline, while the sellers will continue to
    step in around the 0.8072 level and look to increase the bearish bets on a
    break below the trendline.

    USDCHF Technical
    Analysis – 1 hour Timeframe

    On the 1 hour chart, we can
    see that we have a minor downward trendline that’s acting as resistance. The
    sellers will likely continue to lean on it to keep pushing into new lows, while
    the buyers will look for a break higher to increase the bullish bets into new
    highs. The red lines define the average daily range for today.

    Upcoming
    Catalysts

    Today we have Fed Chair Powell speaking although he’s
    unlikely to change his stance given that we haven’t got anything new on the
    data front. For now, we know that only the US CPI will be published despite the
    shutdown, which is scheduled for Friday October 24.

    This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.

  • And the dip buyers are back in gold..

    As gold continues to hold at fresh record highs amid the sudden shifts in broader market sentiment, one can reasonably expect a lot more volatility spikes on profit-taking and dip buying among other things. And that’s what we’re seeing today. In early European trading, we saw gold fall off from a high of $4,179 to $4,090 in just a little over an hour. That before rising back up now to be up 0.6% on the day at $4,139:

    Meanwhile, silver has also bounced back modestly and is down just 0.7% on the day to $51.95. That after falling to a low of $50.93 with the high having touched $53.62 earlier in the day.

    At some point, a much more significant correction will beckon for both gold and silver. But for now at least, dip buyers are still showing that they have some appetite left in them.

    This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.

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