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The Euro (EUR) is entering Tuesday’s NA session flat to the US Dollar (USD) as it extends its tight consolidation for a fourth consecutive session and trades within a remarkably narrow range in the mid-1.16s, Scotiabank’s Chief FX Strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report.
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53% of investors with a required withdrawal for 2025 still haven’t taken it: Fidelity
The deadline for required minimum distributions is Dec. 31. Here’s how to avoid an IRS penalty of up to 25%. -
Novo Nordisk continues to fall: Where I am buying the stock
Novo Nordisk (NVO) had another tough session yesterday, finishing more than 2% lower compared to Friday’s close. The pharmaceutical company behind well-known drugs like Wegovy and Ozempic has struggled throughout the year, and the stock now sits more than 50% below its highs from earlier in 2024. -
China imported more Crude Oil from Saudi Arabia and Iran – Commerzbank
China boosted crude imports from Saudi Arabia and Iran in November, while Russian volumes declined amid weak demand and newly imposed U.S. sanctions. -
USDCAD Technical Analysis: Pair Corrects Higher but Finds Sellers
The USDCAD rebounds after sharp fall from the stronger jobs report last week.
The USDCAD saw an aggressive move lower last Friday after Canada delivered a second straight month of stronger-than-expected employment gains. That upside surprise for the Canadian economy produced a decisive shift in sentiment and triggered a sharp downside push in the pair. In the process, the price broke below both the 100-day and 200-day moving averages at 1.3907 and 1.3886, marking a meaningful technical deterioration. Once below those key longer-term trend indicators, the selling accelerated, driving the pair through the 50% retracement of the entire May–June rally at 1.3839. Momentum ultimately carried the decline toward the 1.3800 psychological area, where the market printed a low at 1.37986 during yesterday’s North American session.
REBOUND, but the bounce is limited.
After that extended fall, the pair finally found some footing as the broader U.S. dollar strengthened on Monday, allowing USDCAD to rebound back above the 50% midpoint at 1.3839. However, the recovery showed clear signs of stalling. The rebound topped out near 1.3856 yesterday, and today’s high again struggled around that same zone—well ahead of the 38.2% retracement of last Thursday’s decline, which sits at 1.38657. That inability to even test, let alone break, the first major Fibonacci resistance level tells an important story: buyers lack conviction, and the upside simply does not have the momentum needed to challenge the dominant bearish shift.
What next for traders?
If the price can break and hold below 1.38657, the sellers retain the firm technical advantage. They forced the breakdown through key moving averages, they defended the first pullback, and they continue to dictate the terms of the battle.
The buyers, by contrast, are not doing enough—failing to reclaim lost ground or generate any sustained push through resistance.
For now, the burden remains squarely on the buyers to prove they can turn the tide. Until that happens, the risk and bias continue to tilt toward the downside.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
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CAD holds in tight range after jobs-driven shakeout – Scotiabank
The Canadian Dollar (CAD) has settled back into a narrow range after drifting a little lower overall yesterday. Market positioning was caught offside by the surprisingly strong Canadian jobs data Friday, Scotiabank’s Chief FX Strategists Shaun Osborne and Eric Theoret report. -
Walmart international gains in Q3: Can the upside extend into 2026?
Walmart Inc.’s (WMT – Free Report) International unit stood out as the company’s strongest engine of growth in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, offering a clear window into how its global momentum is taking shape as the next year approaches. -
The No. 1 thing parents need to stop doing when buying gifts for their kids: ‘It can backfire,’ says expert
Can’t decide what to get your kids for the holidays this year? Parenting expert Jen Zamzow shares her gift-shopping rules for the holidays. It can help you save money, stay sane, and raise more successful kids. -
China’s Crude imports jump in November – Commerzbank
China’s November crude imports surged to 12.4 mb/d, well above domestic needs and the strongest pace since August 2023. -
USD softens ahead of FOMC – Scotiabank
The US Dollar (USD) has eased back a little this morning, reversing some of the gains seen yesterday, as markets hold on to broader ranges ahead of tomorrow’s FOMC decision.
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