AUD/JPY may further struggle as the Australian Dollar faces challenges due to increased risk aversion.
US Vice President JD Vance confirmed USโIran talks in Islamabad ended without a deal after 21 hours of negotiations.
Japanโs 10-year bond yield rose to 2.47% as oil surged after USโIran talks collapsed.
AUD/JPY pares its daily losses but remains in the negative territory, trading around 112.40 during the Asian hours on Monday. The currency cross faced challenges as the Australian Dollar (AUD) weakened asย risk aversionย increased after US Vice President JD Vance said Washington and Tehran failed to reach a peace agreement in Islamabad following 21 hours of talks.
US President Donald Trump said Washington would begin blockading all ships entering or leaving the Strait of Hormuz, while US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed operations targeting maritime traffic to and from Iranian ports from 10 AM ET (14:00 GMT) Monday.
Rising energy costs have also fueled inflation concerns, with Australiaโs monthly inflation gauge hitting a record 1.3% in March, signaling renewed price pressures since late 2025. The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has already raisedย ratesย by 50 basis points to 4.10%, and markets now expect another hike in May.
The downside of the EUR/JPY cross could be restrained as the Japanese Yen (JPY) struggles with stagflation concerns amid rising oil prices. Rising energy costs fueled expectations of a near-term Bank of Japan (BoJ) rate hike.
Theย BoJย is set to hold its next policy decision on April 28, where officials will evaluate whether elevated global energy and commodity prices justify tightening. Japanโs 10-year government bond yield rose to around 2.47% on Monday as oil prices surged following the breakdown of USโIran peace talks.
The Sakura Report showed board members balancing upside inflation risks against downside growth risks following the April 6 branch managersโ meeting. All nine regions maintained that their economies were either โrecovering moderately,โ โpicking up,โ or โpicking up moderately.โ
USD/CHF regains positive traction on Monday as failed US-Iran peace talks boost the USD.
Reviving inflation fears reaffirm hawkish Fed expectations and also benefit the Greenback.
The setup favors bullish traders and backs the case for a further intraday appreciating move.
The USD/CHF pairย kicks off the new week on a positive note and recovers further from a nearly three-week low, around the 0.7855 area, touched on Friday. Spot prices, for now, seem to have snapped a five-day losing streak and currently trade around the 0.7925 region, up 0.50% for the day, amid a broadly firmer US Dollar (USD).
The global risk sentiment takes a turn for the worse in reaction to failed US-Iran peace talks over the weekend and benefits the USD’s global reserve currency status. Despite nearly 21 hours of intense discussions, high-level negotiations between the US and Iran ended without a breakthrough. Adding to this, US President Donald Trump said that the US Navy would start blockading any and all ships trying to enter or leave the Strait of Hormuz, raising the risk of a further escalation of tensions in the region.
Meanwhile, the latest developments trigger a sharp rally in Crude Oil prices and revive inflationary concerns, which might force major central banks, including the USย Federal Reserveย (Fed), to adopt a more hawkish stance. Furthermore, hot inflation data released on Friday led investors to abandon bets on Fed rate cuts this year and shift focus towards potential rate hikes. This is reinforced by a fresh leg up in US Treasury bond yields, which turns out to be another factor offering support to the Greenback.
The Wall Street Journal, citing officials familiar with the discussions, reported that regional countries are working to bring the US and Iran back to the negotiating table within days. This keeps the door open for further diplomacy, which keeps a lid on additional USD gains. That said, the USD/CHF pair showed some resilience below the 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA), and the subsequent move favors bullish traders. ย This suggests that the path of least resistance for spot prices is to the upside.
EUR/JPY struggles as the Euro faces challenges on increased risk aversion.
US Vice President JD Vance confirmed that USโIran talks in Islamabad ended without a deal.
Rising energy costs boosted expectations of a near-term Bank of Japan rate hike.
EUR/JPY pares its daily losses but remains in the negative territory, trading around 186.60 during the Asian hours on Monday. The currency cross faced challenges as the risk-sensitive Euro (EUR) lost ground following the failure of the United States (US)-Iran peace talks. US Vice President JD Vance confirmed that the USโIran talks in Islamabad ended without a deal following 21 hours of negotiations.
US President Donald Trump said Washington would begin blockading all ships entering or leaving the Strait of Hormuz, while US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed operations targeting maritime traffic to and from Iranian ports from 10 AM ET (14:00 GMT) on Monday.
Nordeaโs Jan von Gerich and Tuuli Koivu, in their pre-ceasefire European Central Bank (ECB)ย outlook, projected four 25-basis-point rate hikes starting in June. While they now see downside risks to this view, they emphasize that broader price pressures persist and that even a resolution to the conflict would not eliminate the need forย ECBย tightening.
The downside of the EUR/JPY cross could be restrained as the Japanese Yen (JPY) struggles on stagflation concerns amid rising oil prices. Rising energy costs fueled expectations of a near-term Bank of Japan (BoJ) rate hike. Theย BoJย is set to hold its next policy decision on April 28, where officials will evaluate whether elevated global energy and commodity prices justify tightening.
The Sakura Report showed board members balancing upside inflation risks against downside growth risks following the April 6 branch managersโ meeting. All nine regions maintained that their economies were either โrecovering moderately,โ โpicking up,โ or โpicking up moderately.โ
USD/JPY struggles to build on modest Asian session gains as intervention fears limit JPY losses.
The fundamental backdrop favors the USD bulls and backs the case for further gains for the pair.
The technical setup also suggests that the path of least resistance for spot prices is to the upside.
The USD/JPY pair builds on gains from the past two days and opens with a bullish gap at the start of the new week, rising to the 159.85 region during the Asian session. However, intervention fears keep a lid on any further appreciation for spot prices.
Failed US-Iran peace talks trigger a fresh wave of the global risk-aversion trade and benefit the US Dollar’s (USD) reserve currency status. Adding to this, rallying Crude Oil prices fuel inflationary fears and reaffirm hawkish USย Federal Reserveย (Fed) expectations, which further underpins the buck and offers support to the USD/JPY pair.
The Japanese Yen (JPY), on the other hand, is weighed down by economic concerns stemming from imported energy shocks due to the Middle East conflict. However, speculations that authorities would step in to stem further JPY weakness hold back bearish traders from placing aggressive bets and cap gains for the USD/JPY pair.
Spot prices retain a bullish bias following last week’s resilience below the 158.25-158.20 horizontal support. Furthermore, the USD/JPY pair holds comfortably above the 200-period Simple Moving Average (SMA). The Relative Strength Index (RSI) near 63 suggests firm upside momentum without yet signaling overbought conditions.
Adding to this, the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) turns increasingly positive, hinting that buyers retain control for now. The USD/JPY bulls, however, might await a sustained strength and acceptance above the 160.00 psychological mark before positioning for an extension of a three-day-old appreciating move.
On the downside, initial support is reinforced by the 200-period SMA at 158.56, which underpins the broader uptrend and would be the first level watched in the event of a corrective pullback. This is followed by the 158.25-158.20 support and the 158.00 mark, which, if broken, could turn the USD/JPY pair vulnerable.
EUR/USD may face key resistance near 1.1750 at the upper ascending channel boundary.
The 14-day Relative Strength Index near 56 signals positive momentum.
The immediate support lies at the 50-day EMA near 1.1640.
EUR/USD edges higher after opening at a gap down, trading around 1.1690 during the Asian hours on Monday. The daily chart technical analysis indicates a bullish bias, as the pair is rising within an ascending channel.
The EUR/USD pairย holds a modest bullish bias as it stays above both the nine-day and 50-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs). This constructive positioning is backed by a 14-day Relative Strength Index near 56, which suggests positive but not overstretched momentum, leaving room for further upside while the pair remains supported on dips.
On the upside, the EUR/USD pair may find its primary barrier at the upper boundary of the ascending channel around 1.1750, followed by the eight-week high of 1.1834, reached on February 23. Further advances above this confluence resistance zone would lead the pair in exploring the region around 1.2082, the highest since June 2021, reached on January 27.
The EUR/USD pair may find the immediate support at the 50-day EMA of 1.1640, aligned with the nine-day EMA of 1.1636. A break below these averages would weaken the price momentum and expose the lower ascending channel boundary around 1.1500, followed by the eight-month low of 1.1411, recorded on March 13.
EUR/USD: Daily Chart
(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)
Euro Price Today
The table below shows the percentage change of Euro (EUR) against listed major currencies today. Euro was the weakest against the US Dollar.
USD
EUR
GBP
JPY
CAD
AUD
NZD
CHF
USD
0.32%
0.46%
0.27%
0.17%
0.45%
0.28%
0.35%
EUR
-0.32%
0.12%
-0.04%
-0.14%
0.11%
-0.03%
0.07%
GBP
-0.46%
-0.12%
-0.17%
-0.29%
-0.02%
-0.17%
-0.10%
JPY
-0.27%
0.04%
0.17%
-0.15%
0.14%
-0.03%
0.11%
CAD
-0.17%
0.14%
0.29%
0.15%
0.32%
0.13%
0.19%
AUD
-0.45%
-0.11%
0.02%
-0.14%
-0.32%
-0.15%
-0.02%
NZD
-0.28%
0.03%
0.17%
0.03%
-0.13%
0.15%
0.10%
CHF
-0.35%
-0.07%
0.10%
-0.11%
-0.19%
0.02%
-0.10%
The heat map shows percentage changes of major currencies against each other. The base currency is picked from the left column, while the quote currency is picked from the top row. For example, if you pick the Euro from the left column and move along the horizontal line to the US Dollar, the percentage change displayed in the box will represent EUR (base)/USD (quote).
USD/CAD struggles to build on its modest gains amid a combination of factors.
The door for further diplomacy remains open, capping the USD and the major.
Rallying Oil prices underpin the Loonie and act as a headwind for spot prices.
Theย USD/CADย pair retreats a few pips from the Asian session high and currently trades around the 1.3860-1.3855 region, up around 0.15% for the day. Meanwhile, the mixed fundamental backdrop warrants caution before positioning for an extension of a modest recovery from sub-1.3800 levels, or over a two-week low set on Friday.
The US Dollar (USD) struggles to capitalize on the weekly bullish gap opening amid reports that regional countries are racing to bring the US and Iran back to the negotiating table within days. This keeps the door open for further diplomacy and caps the safe-haven Greenback. Moreover, an intraday rally in Crude Oil prices underpins the commodity-linked Loonie and contributes to capping the USD/CAD pair.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) โ the benchmark US Crude Oil price โ rallies back to the $105/barrel mark in reaction to failed US-Iran peace talks over the weekend. In fact, US Vice President JD Vance said that he placed a final andย bestย offer on the table, but Iran declined to accept the terms, leading to a stalemate. Meanwhile, Iranian state media said that excessive demands sank the possibility of an agreement.
Furthermore, US President Donald Trump said that the US Navy would start blockading the Strait of Hormuz, jeopardizing a fragile two-week ceasefire. Adding to this, continued Israeli strikes in Lebanon raise the risk of a renewed escalation of tensions in the Middle East and support oil prices. However, hawkish USย Federal Reserveย (Fed) bets should limit deeper losses for the buck and the USD/CAD pair.
Data released on Friday showed that inflation in the US surged by the most in nearly four years during March. Apart from this, the war-driven surge in elevated energy prices led investors to abandon bets on Fed rate cuts and shift focus to potential interest rate hikes this year. Theย outlookย triggers a fresh leg up in US Treasury bond yields, which favors the USD bulls and acts as a tailwind for the USD/CAD pair.
The offshore yuan weakened to around 6.83 per dollar on Monday, snapping a six-session winning streak, as the greenback strengthened broadly after USโIran peace talks ended without a breakthrough. The face-to-face negotiations between the two countries’ delegations concluded with both sides acknowledging that significant differences remain. Vice President JD Vance reiterated the lack of progress, while Iranian representatives echoed similar concerns. Following the talks, President Trump announced that the US Navy would begin blockading the Strait of Hormuz, raising further concerns over potential disruptions to global energy supplies. On the domestic front, investors are closely watching a packed economic calendar this week. Key data releases, including the trade balance, Q1 GDP growth, industrial output, retail sales, and the unemployment rate, are expected to provide fresh insights into the strength and trajectory of the economy.
Markets are in a jubilant mood as we lead up to the weekend. Spurred by a milder March reading of US inflation than expected, rate cut expectations are building, and stocks are rallying. Headline CPI in the US rose at a 3.4% annual rate, a hefty jump from the 2.4% rate in February, but lower than the 3.5% expected core prices rose by a 2.6% annual rate, also weaker than expected. The BLS reported that the index for energy rose by 10% in March, driven by a 21% rise in the price of gasolene.
US price growth not as bad as feared
The jump in gasolene prices accounted for three quarters of the rise in inflation last month, according to the BLS. Airline fares also rose sharply last month, but this was partly offset by a drop in medical costs and in used car prices. Todayโs data suggests two things: 1, the inflationary impact from this crisis has been huge, but it is offset by weaker inflation growth elsewhere, such as a moderate increase in shelter costs, a drop in the cost of utilities and no change in food prices last month. 2, if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened soon, then the impact on inflation could spread to food prices and to core inflation, which typically takes longer to absorb energy price shocks.
The immediate market reaction has been relief. A higher-than-expected reading for inflation could have spooked financial markets as we lead up to the weekend. Instead, this supports current expectations of a rate cut from the Federal Reserve by year end, which is boosting the market mood.
Markets optimistic about peace talks
Some concrete economic data that quantifies the effect of the war as being less onerous than first anticipated, combined with hopes for successful peace talks is helping US stocks to extend their longest winning streak this year. Rather than selling stocks on a Friday in case of an escalation of the conflict in the Middle East over the weekend, the market is willing to โgive peace a chance.โ
Stocks have strong week, as dollar reverses course
The dollar is weaker across the board on Friday after the lower-than-expected US inflation print, which is boosting hopes of a rate cut from the Fed. However, the bond market is less enthusiastic, and bonds are selling off across Europe after Forties crude from the North Sea reached a fresh record high above $147 per barrel. Until the Strait of Hormuz is fully open and Gulf energy infrastructure is operational, the bond market is likely to trade with a more cautious tone compared to stocks.
Stocks are on course for their best weekly performance of the year so far, as you can see below, and this has been spurred by the marketโs conviction that President Trump will continue with a ceasefire and the conflict in the Middle East is now at its end stages. The Trump reversal index is now back at levels last reached before the war started. The market is pricing for a positive outcome from the negotiations between the US and Iran this weekend, below, we assess potential outcomes from this weekendโs talks and their impact on financial markets:
Peace talks, assessing the potential outcomes
1, Positive outcome: The two sides agree to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, which leads to an immediate reopening of the waterway. An even better outcome would be one without tariffs to pass through the Strait. The oil price is likely to fall back to pre-war levels for Brent, between $75 and $80 per barrel, stocks could surge and bonds will also rally, leading to another sharp decline in global bond yields. We believe there is a low probability, 30% or less, of this perfect outcome happening straight away.
2, Moderate outcome: The negotiations end without a deal, but more talks are expected. The prospect of prolonged negotiations could knock sentiment at the start of next week, but any weakness could fade if there are continued pledges to work towards a lasting peace. While stocks may extend this weekโs rally, a high oil price could stymie further gains, especially if there is no concrete plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. We think that this is the most likely outcome and think there is a 70-80% chance that further talks will be needed.
3, Negative outcome: The talks fail, both sides walk away and the bombing in Iran and around the Gulf resumes. This could see the oil price reach fresh highs above $120 per barrel for Brent, stocks will tank and bond yields will surge. We believe that this is also a low probability outcome, with 10-15% chance.
Overall, the outcome of negotiations are the main focus for markets as we end the week.
Chart 1: S&P 500, weekly performance chart 1 year
Source: XTB and Bloomberg
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