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The USD/JPY exchange rate has hovered at its highest level since July 17, after the latest Japanese wage income data. The pair, which is the third most popular forex cross, traded at 158.05, up by 13.25% from its lowest point in September 24. So, what next for the USD to JPY price ahead of the US NFP data?
According to Japan’s statistics agency, the average wage income data jumped from 2.2% in October to 3.0% in November.
Another report showed that the overtime pay rose from 0.70% to 1.60. These are important numbers because wages often has an impact on inflation, which then impacts the central bank’s decision.
The rising wages mean that Japan’s inflation may remain high in the coming months. Recent data showed that Japan’s inflation rose from 2.3% in October to 2.9% in November, the highest increase in three months. That figure was much higher than the Bank of Japan’s target of 2.0%.
Therefore, the strong wage numbers, high inflation rate, and the falling yen means that the Bank of Japan (BoJ) may continue to diverge from the Federal Reserve.
The BoJ raised interest rates twice in 2024, helping it exit negative rates. It pushed the benchmark rate to 0.25%, the highest number in years.
Therefore, there are rising odds that the bank will continue hiking interest rates later this year. Analysts see it hiking by 0.25% either in the January 24 meeting or later this year.
The main hindrance to BoJ hikes is Japan’s economy. A report released last month showed that the country’s GDP expanded by 0.7% in Q3, and analysts expect it to grow by 0.4% this year.
High interest rates hurts an economy by making the cost of borrowing capital for consumers and businesses higher.
The USD/JPY pair also reacted to Wednesday’s Federal Reserve minutes. These minutes provided more details about last month’s meeting in which officials had a hawkish tilt.
Fed officials are mostly concerned about inflation, which may increase soon after Donald Trump becomes president. Trump has made many promises, including raising tariffs on goods entering the US.
Fed officials expect to deliver just two interest rates cuts this year instead of the previous four. And analysts anticipate that the first cut will happen in July this year.
The next important USD/JPY news will be the upcoming US nonfarm payrolls (NFP) data scheduled on Friday. While these numbers are important, their impact on the greenback may be muted since the Fed now focuses on inflation.
Economists expect the upcoming data to show that the economy added over 150k jobs in December, while the jobless rate remained at 4.2%. ADP’s report released on Wednesday showed that the private sector added just 122,000 jobs, lower than expected. Another report on Tuesday showed that job vacancies increased to over 8 million in November, the highest level in months.

The daily chart shows that the USD to JPY exchange rate has been in a tight range in the past few days. It has constantly remained slightly above the important support level at 156.78, its highest swing on November 5.
The pair has moved above the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement level and the 50-day moving average. It has also formed a bullish flag pattern, often leading to a strong bullish breakout. Therefore, barring any interventions by the Bank of Japan, there is a risk that the USD/JPY pair will have a strong bullish breakout as buyers target the psychological point of 160.
The post USD/JPY forecast: Will the Japanese yen crash to 160 soon? appeared first on Invezz
Copper prices eased on Tuesday, December 16, 2025, extending the market’s pullback from last week’s record highs as traders weighed weaker signals from China’s economy, year-end liquidity conditions, and shifting expectations around U.S. trade policy.
After surging to an all-time high of $11,952 per metric ton on the London Metal Exchange (LME) last Friday, copper has turned more volatile—moving sharply on every new data point and headline about inventories, tariffs, and demand from AI-related infrastructure. [1]
Copper is traded globally across several benchmarks, and prices can differ by exchange and contract month. Here are the key reference points from today’s coverage:
Why the numbers don’t perfectly match: LME “three‑month copper” is typically quoted in $/ton, SHFE in yuan/ton, and COMEX in $/lb. On top of that, outlets reference different timestamps (Asian open vs. London morning vs. close), and some feeds are delayed or contract-specific. [7]
The day’s dominant macro driver was renewed concern about demand in China, the world’s largest copper consumer.
Reuters reporting cited slower factory output growth to a 15‑month low in November, with new home prices continuing to decline—a reminder that the property sector remains a persistent drag. [8]
At the same time, copper’s pullback is not just about China. The market has been wrestling with a second narrative: whether part of the late‑2025 rally has become overly “crowded” and speculative, tied to the idea that AI data centers and electrification will overwhelm supply. Reuters noted that renewed fears of an “AI bubble” contributed to a sharp sell-off after the recent record high. [9]
In plain terms: copper is being traded as both a growth metal and a theme trade. When investors feel confident about global growth and AI capex, copper can behave like a momentum asset. When doubts emerge—about China, tech valuations, or macro conditions—the market can snap back quickly.
Another important piece of today’s copper story is market structure rather than fundamentals.
A separate Reuters update described cautious trading ahead of U.S. jobs data and thinning year‑end liquidity, warning that reduced depth can exaggerate intraday moves. [10] In that report, analysts flagged that base‑metals price action is becoming more jumpy into late December—making copper especially vulnerable given how far it has run this year.
That same Reuters dispatch also highlighted a key “real economy” indicator watched closely by metals desks: the Yangshan copper premium (often used as a proxy for Chinese import demand) has stabilized around $42, described as a two‑month high. [11] This doesn’t erase the weak macro prints from China, but it does suggest that physical market signals are not uniformly bearish.
Even after today’s dip, copper remains one of the standout performers of 2025.
Reuters reporting said copper is up about 33% year-to-date, on track for its biggest annual rise since 2009, driven by a mix of mine disruptions, U.S.-linked inventory flows, and expectations for AI and energy-transition demand. [12]
Those drivers matter because they help explain why copper has been able to set records even while some traditional demand signals (like parts of China’s property market) remain weak.
If there is one theme that repeatedly shows up in today’s copper news cycle, it is this: U.S. tariff risk is influencing real-world copper flows—and, by extension, the price discovery process.
A Reuters item published today said Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 copper price forecast to $11,400 per metric ton(from $10,650). [13]
The same report described the bank’s view that the market is increasingly centered on the timing and design of potential U.S. copper import tariffs. Goldman discussed a scenario framework including:
Goldman also noted that the possibility of future tariffs can keep U.S. copper prices at a premium to the LME benchmark and encourage stockpiling, tightening availability outside the U.S. [15]
Reuters reported that daily inflows to COMEX copper stocks have continued, with inventories already at record highs, a dynamic linked to the price premium and tariff uncertainty. [16]
A Business Insider analysis published today makes a similar point in plain language: large U.S. inventories can become effectively “stuck” in-country, leaving the rest of the world with a tighter tradable pool—one reason the market can feel squeezed even when broader forecasts point to surplus conditions. [17]
One reason copper is so volatile right now is that major institutions disagree on the 2026 balance.
In the same Reuters piece on Goldman’s forecast, the bank lifted its forecast for the 2026 global market surplus to 300,000 tons (from 160,000 tons). [18]
That combination—a higher price forecast alongside a larger surplus estimate—sounds contradictory at first glance. But it becomes more coherent if you think in terms of regional dislocations: copper can be “surplus” globally while still feeling tight in the places that matter most for deliverable exchange stocks and spot premiums, especially if U.S. flows continue to distort availability elsewhere.
A separate Reuters excerpt on Morgan Stanley said the bank expects copper to post a 260,000‑ton deficit in 2025 and a much larger 600,000‑ton deficit in 2026. [19]
Morgan Stanley also flagged that copper inventories outside the United States are low and could shrink further if U.S. imports continue and data-center demand outpaces supply growth. [20]
Bottom line: On Dec. 16, the market is being pulled between two coherent—but different—stories:
Copper’s record pricing is also feeding back into corporate strategy and politics.
A Financial Times report today said the Canadian government has approved the $60 billion merger between Anglo American and Teck Resources, creating one of the world’s biggest copper producers (with the merged entity set to be headquartered in Vancouver, according to the report). [23]
M&A of this scale matters for price watchers because it reflects a broader reality: high-quality copper assets are scarce, project timelines are long, and governments increasingly treat copper supply as strategic—especially with electrification, grid buildouts, and data-center expansion all competing for the same material.
Copper’s direction into late December is likely to depend on a short list of fast-moving variables:
Copper price today is not being set by one single driver—it’s being set by the intersection of China’s uneven recovery, tight supply narratives, AI- and electrification-linked demand expectations, and a uniquely powerful swing factor: U.S. trade policy and stockpiling.
That mix helps explain why copper can sit near record territory while still selling off hard on a weak China print, and why 2026 forecasts can disagree so widely—even among top-tier institutions—without either side sounding unreasonable. [28]
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The US dollar initially tried to rally against the Japanese yen but then rolled over to show signs of hesitation on the bullish side. That being said, the 155 yen level does look like it’s trying to offer a little bit of support. And therefore, I think this could end up being a small buying opportunity. I recognize that there are a lot of questions right now about the Federal Reserve and what’s happening next. But at this point, the one thing that I do know is that the interest rate differential will continue to favor the US dollar.
Therefore, over the longer term, it should favor this pair going higher. Even if we were to break down from here, the 50-day EMA comes into the picture at just about 154 yen to offer support and then again at 152 yen, which I think is more likely than not, we do get a little bit of a pullback, but I think it ends up being a buying opportunity. That’ll be especially true once we get through the Bank of Japan later this week.
And therefore, I think a little bit of choppy sideways volatility makes a certain amount of sense. But as I’ve been saying for months, I’ve been holding this pair. I get paid every day to hold this pair. That’s the power of the carry trade. And the carry trade is expected to be a big thing again, especially if the United States remains a little more hawkish than originally thought.
And most of the leading economic numbers in the United States do suggest that 2026 may not be a bad year for the US economy at all. With this, and the fact that the Japanese have a structural problem with the ability to really tighten monetary policy, I think these dips continue to offer buying opportunities if you’re patient enough, probably a much longer-term one, but even shorter-term traders are jumping on this train.
Want to trade our USD/JPY forex analysis and predictions? Here’s a list of forex brokers in Japan to check out.
Christopher Lewis has been trading Forex and has over 20 years experience in financial markets. Chris has been a regular contributor to Daily Forex since the early days of the site. He writes about Forex for several online publications, including FX Empire, Investing.com, and his own site, aptly named The Trader Guy. Chris favours technical analysis methods to identify his trades and likes to trade equity indices and commodities as well as Forex. He favours a longer-term trading style, and his trades often last for days or weeks.
Platinum prices are extending a standout 2025 rally on Tuesday, December 16, 2025, with spot quotes hovering around the $1,800–$1,830 per ounce zone in early trading—levels last seen in 2011. Data from major bullion dealers showed spot platinum around $1,828/oz in the morning (U.S. time), up roughly 1.6% over 24 hours. [1]
Platinum’s move is notable because it’s happening even as gold cools from recent highs ahead of key U.S. labor-market releases. In one of the day’s most closely watched macro setups, Reuters reported that investors were positioned cautiously ahead of delayed U.S. jobs data, while platinum still pushed higher—helped by both tight-physical-market narratives and fresh focus on European auto-policy decisions that could influence long-term demand for catalytic converters. [2]
Below is a complete, publication-ready roundup of today’s platinum price action, the news drivers moving the market, and the latest forecasts and analyst views shaping expectations into 2026—all based on information available on 16.12.2025.
Because platinum trades around the clock and pricing differs slightly by venue (spot vs. futures), today’s headlines are best understood as a range rather than a single print.
What this means for readers: “Platinum price today” is best framed as roughly $1,810–$1,830 spot, while actively traded futures were probing the mid‑$1,800s, with the day’s top end brushing the $1,860 area. [6]
Reuters described platinum as hitting its highest level since September 2011, even while other precious metals were mixed. In Reuters’ pricing snapshot, spot platinum rose about 1.3% to $1,805.85 during the session, reinforcing the sense that platinum has become a new focal point in the broader precious-metals complex. [7]
That “multi‑year high” label matters in real markets: it tends to pull in momentum traders, systematic strategies, and generalist investors who previously ignored platinum because it spent years lagging gold.
On Tuesday, gold softened as markets waited for delayed U.S. employment reports (covering October and November) and later-week inflation releases—data that can shift expectations about the Federal Reserve’s 2026 rate path. Reuters noted that the jobs release would be missing some details due to disruptions in U.S. data collection following a government shutdown, but it still sits at the center of near-term rate expectations. [8]
Why this matters for platinum specifically:
One of the most platinum-relevant headlines in today’s news cycle is coming out of Brussels.
This doesn’t guarantee a sudden surge in platinum demand—policy details and timelines still matter—but it helps explain why platinum can rally on a day when investors are otherwise cautious ahead of U.S. macro data.
Platinum’s 2025 strength hasn’t been driven by one factor. A recurring theme is tightness in physical availability—and today’s analysis stream added fresh detail.
A Commerzbank note highlighted by FXStreet said Russia’s largest palladium producer published updated forecasts indicating:
That same note emphasized a key nuance: different organizations model “investment demand” differently, and conclusions about whether higher prices are justified can change depending on what you assume about ETFs, bars and coins, and exchange inventory flows. [12]
The World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC) recently projected:
WPIC also pointed to indicators of tightness in the market (lease rates and backwardation), arguing that tight conditions can persist even after a big price run. [14]
Bottom line: Today’s market is balancing two truths at once—(1) platinum has already rallied sharply, and (2) multiple credible outlooks still describe a market that is structurally constrained, even if 2026 trends toward balance.
In a broader precious-metals outlook published today, Reuters reported that Morgan Stanley forecasts platinum at $1,775/oz in 2026 (with palladium at $1,325), citing structural imbalances and different demand drivers across the complex. [15]
That projection is important for two reasons:
The FXStreet/Commerzbank commentary stressed that when you exclude investor demand, WPIC’s framework can even imply oversupply, which would not support further price gains—highlighting why the next phase for platinum may depend heavily on whether investors keep adding exposure via ETFs, bars, coins, and exchange inventory changes. [16]
Technical dashboards won’t tell you why platinum is moving, but they do reveal how crowded the trend may be.
With futures printing up to the mid‑$1,800s and the day’s trading range extending toward $1,861, traders are watching whether the market can hold above the psychologically important $1,800 zone without sharp pullbacks. [18]
Reuters emphasized that markets were focused on U.S. employment data (October and November) and upcoming inflation releases (CPI and PCE). These prints can quickly swing the U.S. dollar, real yields, and risk appetite—all of which can feed into platinum prices. [19]
If the European Commission’s auto-sector package or related political messaging materially changes expectations for the pace of ICE phaseouts, it could influence longer-run projections for catalytic converter demand—especially for platinum and palladium. [20]
The market is acutely sensitive to whether “tightness” is being eased by above-ground stocks, ETF flows, or exchange inventory movements—exactly the variables analysts are debating in today’s research notes. [21]
Platinum’s surge in 2025 is no longer flying under the radar. Today’s pricing shows a metal trading around $1,810–$1,830 spot and mid‑$1,800s in futures, holding near its highest levels since 2011. [22]
The day’s narrative is being driven by:
Meanwhile, the forecast picture is becoming more nuanced: Morgan Stanley’s $1,775/oz 2026 view implies a slower pace after the rally, even as structural constraints remain a core part of the bull case. [26]
Note: Prices are quoted in U.S. dollars per troy ounce and can change rapidly. This article is informational and not investment advice.
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For three consecutive trading sessions, the EUR/USD price has stabilized around its recent upward rebound gains, hovering near the resistance level of 1.1768—the highest for the pair in two months. Overall, based on performance across reliable trading platforms, the rise witnessed in the EUR/USD exchange rate this month indicates it is approaching overbought territory, making it a candidate for a correction amid profit-taking sales.
Technically: The rapid rise in the Euro price recently is pushing the Relative Strength Index (RSI) toward the 70 threshold, the level at which EUR/USD is officially considered overbought. The RSI tends to revert to the mean upon reaching this zone, implying an eventual decline. For this to occur, we need the EUR/USD price to enter a sideways path or a slight downward retreat.
In short, we believe Euro trading will see a slight dip after a strong rally; we would not be surprised to see a pullback below 1.17 this week before the next upward wave. However, charts can only offer limited information in a week marked by major economic data releases.
According to Forex market trading, the EUR/USD exchange rate will be affected by the Eurozone PMI results for December, expected today, Tuesday, starting at 10:15 AM Egypt time. These are expected to confirm continued positive momentum for the region’s economy through the end of the year. Generally, the Eurozone Services PMI is expected to print at 53.3, while the manufacturing sector recovery is expected to confirm a slight rise to 49.9, placing it on the verge of returning to growth.
Overall, strong economic data would support the view that no further interest rate cuts are necessary from the European Central Bank. In fact, a better-than-expected Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) reading would reinforce expectations of continued interest rate hikes.
However, the US Dollar’s path will be the primary driver for EUR/USD during this trading week. The release of US labor market data is the standout event in global financial markets. Notably, this data was delayed by the US government shutdown, meaning it will fill a significant data gap. US November jobs data will be released today, Tuesday, at 15:30 Egypt time, with expectations pointing to an increase of 50,000 jobs and an unemployment rate of 4.4%. If the numbers fall below expectations, the market will increase bets on Fed rate cuts in 2026, negatively affecting US bond yields and the Dollar price today.
Conversely, if the data exceeds expectations, these expectations of an interest rate cut will diminish, and the US dollar may rise and potentially continue its gains for the remainder of the week, potentially hindering the euro’s appreciation against the US dollar.
Furthermore, keep an eye on US Retail Sales data, also scheduled for release today at the same time, which will indicate the strength of demand in the economy. Expectations suggest a figure exceeding 0.2% monthly for October. On Thursday, US Inflation (CPI) data will be released, with expectations of a rise to 3.1% annually in November, compared to 3.0% previously.
Obvioulsy, this trend appears unsatisfactory for the Federal Reserve. Any figure higher than expected will cast doubt on market expectations for rate cuts next year, thereby supporting the US Dollar.
Today’s trading session is crucial in determining the fate of the EUR/USD for the remainder of 2025 and will shape the start of the new year’s trading. Be cautious, as we may witness strong and rapid changes in currency prices.
Ready to trade our EUR/USD daily forecast? Here’s a list of some of the top forex brokers in Europe to check out.
Oil prices fell again on Tuesday, December 16, 2025, pushing Brent crude below the closely watched $60-a-barrel level and keeping West Texas Intermediate (WTI) pinned in the mid-$50s. The move extends a months-long slide driven by a market that is increasingly focused on one question: Will 2026 be defined by a supply glut—especially if geopolitics turns less restrictive for Russian barrels—just as demand growth cools? [1]
At around 12:14 GMT, Brent crude futures were down about 1.3% at roughly $59.75 a barrel, while WTI was down nearly 1.5% near $55.98, according to Reuters. [2]
Crude benchmarks are hovering near multi-month lows:
Bloomberg’s broader markets wrap (published Dec. 16) also described Brent dipping below $60 for the first time since May, underscoring the “risk-off” tone across assets ahead of key U.S. macro releases. [5]
The biggest immediate catalyst is rising optimism around potential Russia–Ukraine peace talks—an outlook that markets interpret as increasing the odds of eased sanctions or reduced logistical friction for Russian crude flows. Reuters reported that the U.S. offered NATO-style security guarantees for Kyiv and that European negotiators flagged progress, though Russia also signaled it was unwilling to make territorial concessions. [6]
From the market’s perspective, even a small perceived increase in “effective supply” can hit prices when balances already look loose. Rystad Energy’s Janiv Shah said the market is assessing whether a peace deal could make additional Russian volumes available and worsen oversupply. [7]
On the demand side, traders are digesting softer Chinese indicators. Reuters highlighted that China’s factory output growth slowed to a 15‑month low, and retail sales growth was the weakest since December 2022—data points that reinforce concerns about consumption momentum in the world’s largest crude importer. [8]
That matters because, in a well-supplied market, oil prices tend to react sharply to any sign demand growth is wobbling—particularly out of China.
Even tensions and disruptions that would typically support crude—such as U.S.-Venezuela-related developments—have struggled to lift the tape. Reuters noted that the impact of the U.S. seizure of a tanker near Venezuela was limited by abundant floating storage and shifts in buying patterns. [9]
In short: today’s tape is less about “what could go wrong” and more about “how much extra oil the world may have next year.”
One of the most important (and nuanced) themes in today’s oil market is that China’s import strength doesn’t automatically translate into stronger end-demand—because a growing share may be headed into inventories.
A Reuters analysis published Dec. 16 estimated China’s “surplus crude” (crude available minus refinery runs) at about 1.88 million barrels per day in November, the highest in six months. Imports were estimated around 12.43 million bpd(a 27‑month high), while refinery throughput was about 14.86 million bpd. [10]
Reuters also noted the price incentive: Brent peaked near $82.63 in mid-January but fell toward the low $60s by December, encouraging opportunistic buying and stockbuilding. [11]
Why this matters for oil price today:
If China is stockpiling into weakness, it can cushion the downside at times—but it can also make the demand picture harder to read. Stockbuilding can fade quickly if prices rebound or if policy shifts, adding uncertainty to 2026 forecasts. [12]
Oil isn’t falling in a vacuum. Multiple major forecasters—and the futures curve itself—have been warning for months that supply growth may outpace demand into 2026.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has been among the most-cited sources behind “glut” talk. In its December 2025 Oil Market Report, the IEA said observed global inventories rose to four-year highs and highlighted that its balances imply a ~3.7 million bpd average surplus from 4Q 2025 through 2026, even after accounting for market opacity and mismatches across crude, NGLs, and products. [13]
Separately, Reuters reported on Dec. 11 that the IEA trimmed its 2026 surplus estimate but still projected supply exceeding demand by about 3.84 million bpd in 2026—still close to 4% of world demand in scale. [14]
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), in its Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO), forecast that rising global inventories could keep pressure on prices and projected Brent averaging about $55 per barrel in Q1 2026, staying near that level for much of the year. [15]
That forecast is a key anchor for the bearish narrative because it ties the price outlook directly to inventory accumulation.
OPEC has maintained a more constructive demand stance than the IEA. Argus reported (from OPEC’s latest Monthly Oil Market Report coverage) that OPEC expects global oil demand to grow by about 1.38 million bpd in 2026 to roughly 106.52 million bpd, and it estimates the “call on OPEC+ crude” around 43 million bpd in 2026. [16]
Reuters also noted that OPEC’s view implies a much tighter balance than the IEA’s. [17]
Translation: If you’re wondering why oil price forecasts diverge so sharply, it often comes down to different assumptions about (1) demand growth, (2) non-OPEC supply, and (3) how disciplined OPEC+ will be if prices weaken further.
Today’s price action is also being amplified by the range of credible, widely cited forecasts now clustering below (or not far above) current levels:
Analysts quoted by Reuters also highlighted a key psychological threshold: PVM Oil Associates suggested Brent could make a fresh year-to-date low, but in their view might not break below $55 before year-end—framing $55 as an important line in the sand for the market narrative. [21]
OPEC+ policy is central to whether today’s weakness becomes a deeper downcycle.
Reuters reported earlier this quarter that OPEC+ agreed to pause output increases for January–March 2026 after boosting targets by around 2.9 million bpd since April, reflecting rising concerns about an oversupplied market. [22]
That pause is one reason some forecasters believe the market may stabilize—at least temporarily—if producers remain willing to slow or stop additional barrels.
But here’s the tension: as prices fall, some producers may want to defend revenue by pumping more, while others may want to defend price by cutting. That internal push-pull is one reason volatility tends to rise when Brent trades near “policy-sensitive” levels like $60 and below.
Oil price today is being driven by headlines, macro data, and forward-looking balances—so the next moves may come from a few specific channels:
Any concrete progress toward a ceasefire—or signals about sanctions enforcement and shipping restrictions—can move crude quickly because it changes the perceived availability and routing of Russian supply. [23]
If China continues importing heavily primarily for stockbuilding, it can support seaborne flows but may not confirm stronger end-demand. Reuters’ storage calculations highlight how important this distinction has become for forecasters. [24]
Broader markets on Dec. 16 were focused on incoming U.S. jobs data and what it implies for rate policy and risk appetite—factors that can feed into oil via growth expectations and currency moves. [25]
Both the IEA and EIA are explicitly linking their bearish price outlooks to the expectation that global inventories continue rising through 2026. If inventory builds accelerate, it strengthens the bearish case; if they slow, it can relieve pressure. [26]
On December 16, 2025, crude is trading like a market that believes supply growth will outpace demand into 2026, and that any easing of Russia-related constraints would only add to that imbalance. [27]
That doesn’t mean prices must fall in a straight line—OPEC+ policy, geopolitics, and China’s buying behavior can still create sharp rallies. But for now, the dominant theme behind oil price today is clear: glut fears are overwhelming disruption fears, and the market is treating sub-$60 Brent as a signal that the next chapter will be fought over how quickly (and how far) inventories build.
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The GBPJPY pair continued providing negative trading, affected by forming extra barrier at 208.10 level, with the negative momentum that comes from stochastic below 50 level, attacking the support at 206.90 that formed the suggested target in the previous report.
The effect of the temporary sideways bias dominance, however facing the negative pressures that might push it to resume the corrective decline, to target 206.25 and 205.80 level, while renewing the bullish attempts requires forming strong bullish attack, to settle above 208.10 then begin targeting new positive stations by its rally towards 209.15.
The expected trading range for today is between 206.25 and 207.65
Trend forecast: Bearish
Gold price (XAU/USD) trades 0.6% lower to near $4,270 during the European trading session on Tuesday. The yellow metal faces intense selling pressure as profit-booking kicks in after revisiting the all-time high above $4,350.
In Tuesday’s session, the major trigger for the United States (US) Nonfarm Payrolls’ (NFP) combined report for October and November, which will be published at 13:30 GMT.
Investors will closely monitor the US NFP data as it will influence market expectations for the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) monetary policy outlook. The employment report is expected to show that the economy created 40K fresh jobs in November, lower than 119K in September. Meanwhile, the Unemployment Rate is seen remaining steady at 4.4%.
Signs of US employment data deteriorating further would prompt expectations of more interest rate cuts by the Fed in the near term. Currently, the CME FedWatch tool shows that trades see an almost 50% chance that the Fed will deliver its next interest rate cut in the March policy meeting.

Gold price declines after revisiting near record highs around $4,385. The 20-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) at $4,204.71 is rising, confirming a bullish near-term trend.
The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) falls to near 64.30 after testing overbought levels around 70.00, signaling indications of a correction phase.
Pullbacks near the 20-day EMA will remain major buys for the Gold price, while a day close below the same could lead to further retracement towards the November 24 low of $4,040. Looking up, fresh upside would set in only if the Gold price gains past its all-time high of $4,385.
(This story was corrected on December 16 at 11:00 GMT to say, in the second paragraph, that today is Tuesday, not Thursday.)
Gold has played a key role in human’s history as it has been widely used as a store of value and medium of exchange. Currently, apart from its shine and usage for jewelry, the precious metal is widely seen as a safe-haven asset, meaning that it is considered a good investment during turbulent times. Gold is also widely seen as a hedge against inflation and against depreciating currencies as it doesn’t rely on any specific issuer or government.
Central banks are the biggest Gold holders. In their aim to support their currencies in turbulent times, central banks tend to diversify their reserves and buy Gold to improve the perceived strength of the economy and the currency. High Gold reserves can be a source of trust for a country’s solvency. Central banks added 1,136 tonnes of Gold worth around $70 billion to their reserves in 2022, according to data from the World Gold Council. This is the highest yearly purchase since records began. Central banks from emerging economies such as China, India and Turkey are quickly increasing their Gold reserves.
Gold has an inverse correlation with the US Dollar and US Treasuries, which are both major reserve and safe-haven assets. When the Dollar depreciates, Gold tends to rise, enabling investors and central banks to diversify their assets in turbulent times. Gold is also inversely correlated with risk assets. A rally in the stock market tends to weaken Gold price, while sell-offs in riskier markets tend to favor the precious metal.
The price can move due to a wide range of factors. Geopolitical instability or fears of a deep recession can quickly make Gold price escalate due to its safe-haven status. As a yield-less asset, Gold tends to rise with lower interest rates, while higher cost of money usually weighs down on the yellow metal. Still, most moves depend on how the US Dollar (USD) behaves as the asset is priced in dollars (XAU/USD). A strong Dollar tends to keep the price of Gold controlled, whereas a weaker Dollar is likely to push Gold prices up.
The GBPJPY pair continued providing negative trading, affected by forming extra barrier at 208.10 level, with the negative momentum that comes from stochastic below 50 level, attacking the support at 206.90 that formed the suggested target in the previous report.
The effect of the temporary sideways bias dominance, however facing the negative pressures that might push it to resume the corrective decline, to target 206.25 and 205.80 level, while renewing the bullish attempts requires forming strong bullish attack, to settle above 208.10 then begin targeting new positive stations by its rally towards 209.15.
The expected trading range for today is between 206.25 and 207.65
Trend forecast: Bearish
The GBPJPY pair continued providing negative trading, affected by forming extra barrier at 208.10 level, with the negative momentum that comes from stochastic below 50 level, attacking the support at 206.90 that formed the suggested target in the previous report.
The effect of the temporary sideways bias dominance, however facing the negative pressures that might push it to resume the corrective decline, to target 206.25 and 205.80 level, while renewing the bullish attempts requires forming strong bullish attack, to settle above 208.10 then begin targeting new positive stations by its rally towards 209.15.
The expected trading range for today is between 206.25 and 207.65
Trend forecast: Bearish