EURUSD TECHS: Corrective Bounce

Mar-11 18:00

* RES 4: 1.1835 High Feb 23 * RES 3: 1.1742 50-day EMA * RES 2: 1.1718 20-day EMA * RES 1: 1.1667 Hi...

Historical bullets

EURUSD TECHS: Impulsive Rally

Feb-09 18:00
  • RES 4: 1.2081 High Jan 27 and key resistance   
  • RES 3: 1.2045 High Jan 28  
  • RES 2: 1.1975 High Jan 30
  • RES 1: 1.1927 High Feb 09
  • PRICE: 1.1907 @ 15:59 GMT Feb 09
  • SUP 1: 1.1766 Low Feb 06
  • SUP 2: 1.1739 50-day EMA
  • SUP 3: 1.1693 76.4% retracement of the Jan 19 -0 27 bull leg 
  • SUP 4: 1.1670 Low Jan 22  

Monday’s price action provides good evidence that the bearish correction in EURUSD has concluded, with the impulsive rally through 1.1900 marking a ~150 pip rally off Friday’s lows. This shifts focus to the scale of the recovery, with 1.1975 the next notable resistance into 1.20 and the cycle highs of 1.2081. Support to watch remains the 50-day EMA, at 1.1739. A clear breach of this 50-day average would suggest scope for a deeper pullback. 

OPTIONS: Notable Vol Trades In UK Rates

Feb-09 17:52

Monday's Europe rates/bond options flow included:

  • DUJ6 106.90/106.80/106.70/106.50p condor, bought for 2.25 in 10k total now
  • ERZ6 98.125/98.3125/98.4375/98.625 call condor paper paid 2.75 on 3K
  • SFIH6 96.50^, bought for 5.75 in 4k
  • SFIH6 96.45/96.55/96.60/96.75 call condor, paper sells for 2.75 in 12k
  • SFIN6 96.60/96.80cs 1x2, bought for 5.5 in 8k
  • SFIU6 96.65^, trades for 22.25 in 12k, this was done Paper to Paper, some suggest bought
  • SFIU6 96.75^, bought for 20.5 in 5k

US DATA: New NFIB Small Business Employment Composite Points To Stabilization

Feb-09 17:26

The NFIB's January Jobs Report showed slight a pullback in labor market conditions for small businesses vs December. This report continues to send mixed signals about current labor market conditions but overall is suggestive of a stabilization following a multi-year pullback. (Report PDF link here).

  • The latest release introduces what looks to be a useful development in the form of a new Small Business Employment Index, "which measures the current state of the small business labor market. The new index integrates actual and planned changes in employment and employee compensation into a singular data point. A higher Index reflects an overall tighter labor market; a lower Index reflects an overall weaker labor market."'
  • According to the NFIB, the new index "fell nearly 1 point in January to 101.6, erasing about half of the large gain in December, which reached the highest level since March 2025. The Index remains above the historical average of 100, and just slightly above the 2025 average of 101.2."
  • The NFIB's chart is below; we await the availability of the underlying data to see how well it correlates with macro labor market variables (the NFIB's full small business report is out Tuesday morning).
  • In the meantime we can see a pullback in some key categories: net hiring plans to 16% from 17% (3-month low), "positions not able to fill" 31% from 33% (lowest since 2017), net compensation plans 22% from 24% (3-month low); current net compensation ticked up to 32% from 31% prior however (7-month high). We took note that "50% of owners reported hiring or trying to hire in January, down 3 points from December and the lowest reading since May 2020."
  • Most of the major series remain in a relative downtrend, with declining job openings / hiring difficulty chiming with other data series.  
  • The recent stabilization in NFIB compensation series suggests that the pullback in wage growth may be stalling, though. And the headline Employment Index appears to be settling in at historically normal levels consistent with solid economic expansion.
  • Historically NFIB hiring plans have been correlated with private payrolls growth trends but lately small business' solid outlooks have diverged with the "hard" payrolls data which have deteriorated in recent months.
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Source: NFIB 
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