Forex & Trading·Jun 5, 2026

USDJPY volatile above the 160.00. EURUSD tests floor area. GBPUSD new lows for week

The USD is sharply higher following a much stronger-than-expected U.S. employment report. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 172K, well above the 85K forecast, while sizeable upward revisions added another 93K jobs to the prior two months. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, average hourly earnings rose 0.3% on the month and 3.4% year-over-year, and the participation rate remained unchanged. Taken together, the report points to a labor market that remains resilient and is not showing signs of meaningful deterioration. The USDJPY initially surged to its highest level since May 1, reaching 160.22, but remains below the next key upside target at 160.446, the March 30 swing high. Above that level, traders would look toward the 2026 high of 160.717 from April 30. However, gains above 160.00 continue to attract caution as traders remain sensitive to the risk of official intervention, even in the absence of any direct warnings from Japanese authorities. After probing higher, the pair briefly pulled back before finding buyers once again. The 160.00 level remains a critical barometer for the pair. Staying above that threshold keeps buyers firmly in control. On the downside, the 100-hour moving average at 159.856 and the 200-hour moving average at 159.601 serve as important support levels. A move below those averages would weaken the bullish bias and shift the technical outlook more to the downside. Until then, the path of least resistance remains higher, with buyers maintaining the upper hand. The EURUSD has moved lower and is now testing an important support zone between 1.1576 and 1.1587. The low price has reached 1.1584 so far, putting the pair near the lower end of that key swing area. A break below the floor at 1.1576, and more importantly, the ability to stay below that level, would likely increase bearish momentum and open the door for a deeper move to the downside. From a technical perspective, the pair has already fallen below the trendlines highlighted on the hourly chart and is moving further away from its 100-hour moving average at 1.16225 and 200-hour moving average at 1.16287. Those moving averages now act as resistance and reinforce the bearish bias. While sellers remain in control, the next key test is whether they can force and sustain a break below 1.1576. Accomplishing that would strengthen the downside case and give sellers greater control of the short-term trend. This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.

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USDJPY volatile above the 160.00. EURUSD tests floor area.  GBPUSD new lows for week
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The gist
5-point summary · 1 min

The USD is sharply higher following a much stronger-than-expected U.S. employment report. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 172K, well above the 85K forecast, while sizeable upward revisions added another 93K jobs to the prior two months. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, average hourly earnings rose 0.3% on the month and 3.4% year-over-year, and the participation rate remained unchanged. Taken together, the report points to a labor market that remains resilient and is not showing signs of meaningful deterioration. The USDJPY initially surged to its highest level since May 1, reaching 160.22, but remains below the next key upside target at 160.446, the March 30 swing high. Above that level, traders would look toward the 2026 high of 160.717 from April 30. However, gains above 160.00 continue to attract caution as traders remain sensitive to the risk of official intervention, even in the absence of any direct warnings from Japanese authorities. After probing higher, the pair briefly pulled back before finding buyers once again. The 160.00 level remains a critical barometer for the pair. Staying above that threshold keeps buyers firmly in control. On the downside, the 100-hour moving average at 159.856 and the 200-hour moving average at 159.601 serve as important support levels. A move below those averages would weaken the bullish bias and shift the technical outlook more to the downside. Until then, the path of least resistance remains higher, with buyers maintaining the upper hand. The EURUSD has moved lower and is now testing an important support zone between 1.1576 and 1.1587. The low price has reached 1.1584 so far, putting the pair near the lower end of that key swing area. A break below the floor at 1.1576, and more importantly, the ability to stay below that level, would likely increase bearish momentum and open the door for a deeper move to the downside. From a technical perspective, the pair has already fallen below the trendlines highlighted on the hourly chart and is moving further away from its 100-hour moving average at 1.16225 and 200-hour moving average at 1.16287. Those moving averages now act as resistance and reinforce the bearish bias. While sellers remain in control, the next key test is whether they can force and sustain a break below 1.1576. Accomplishing that would strengthen the downside case and give sellers greater control of the short-term trend. This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.

  • Nonfarm payrolls increased by 172K, well above the 85K forecast, while sizeable upward revisions added another 93K jobs to the prior two months.
  • The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, average hourly earnings rose 0.3% on the month and 3.4% year-over-year, and the participation rate remained unchanged.
  • The USDJPY initially surged to its highest level since May 1, reaching 160.22, but remains below the next key upside target at 160.446, the March 30 swing high.
  • The low price has reached 1.1584 so far, putting the pair near the lower end of that key swing area.
  • A break below the floor at 1.1576, and more importantly, the ability to stay below that level, would likely increase bearish momentum and open the door for a deeper move to the downside.
4.3%0.3%3.4%
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The USD is sharply higher following a much stronger-than-expected U.S. employment report. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 172K, well above the 85K forecast, while sizeable upward revisions added another 93K jobs to the prior two months. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, average hourly earnings rose 0.3% on the month and 3.4% year-over-year, and the participation rate remained unchanged. Taken together, the report points to a labor market that remains resilient and is not showing signs of meaningful deterioration. The USDJPY initially surged to its highest level since May 1, reaching 160.22, but remains below the next key upside target at 160.446, the March 30 swing high. Above that level, traders would look toward the 2026 high of 160.717 from April 30. However, gains above 160.00 continue to attract caution as traders remain sensitive to the risk of official intervention, even in the absence of any direct warnings from Japanese authorities. After probing higher, the pair briefly pulled back before finding buyers once again. The 160.00 level remains a critical barometer for the pair. Staying above that threshold keeps buyers firmly in control. On the downside, the 100-hour moving average at 159.856 and the 200-hour moving average at 159.601 serve as important support levels. A move below those averages would weaken the bullish bias and shift the technical outlook more to the downside. Until then, the path of least resistance remains higher, with buyers maintaining the upper hand. The EURUSD has moved lower and is now testing an important support zone between 1.1576 and 1.1587. The low price has reached 1.1584 so far, putting the pair near the lower end of that key swing area. A break below the floor at 1.1576, and more importantly, the ability to stay below that level, would likely increase bearish momentum and open the door for a deeper move to the downside. From a technical perspective, the pair has already fallen below the trendlines highlighted on the hourly chart and is moving further away from its 100-hour moving average at 1.16225 and 200-hour moving average at 1.16287. Those moving averages now act as resistance and reinforce the bearish bias. While sellers remain in control, the next key test is whether they can force and sustain a break below 1.1576. Accomplishing that would strengthen the downside case and give sellers greater control of the short-term trend. This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.

Integrity note  ·  Xela does not rewrite or paraphrase article content. The excerpt above is the source publication's own words, sanitized for display. For the full piece — including any quotes, charts, or images — read it at Forexlive. Xela's rewritten version is off for this story, so there's no editorial angle attached — you're getting the source's reporting unfiltered. When the rewrite is on, we add a What this means block underneath with the operator/trader takeaway.

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investingLive Americas FX news wrap 5 Jun:A strong US jobs report sends bonds/stocks lower
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investingLive Americas FX news wrap 5 Jun:A strong US jobs report sends bonds/stocks lower

Taken together, the reports painted a picture of two labor markets that remain far more resilient than expected. That is the good news. The not so good news for policymakers, is that the stronger employment data reduces pressure for additional monetary easing. In the U.S., markets pushed Treasury yields higher and increased expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep rates elevated for longer and perhaps raise rates toward the end of the year (that would be a big reversal from just a few months ago). While in Canada the report reinforced expectations that the Bank of Canada may remain on hold after its recent easing cycle. Currency markets reflected the stronger Canadian data, with USDCAD moving modestly lower following the release, although gains in the U.S. dollar from the stronger U.S. report limited the downside. The stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report sparked a sharp selloff in the Treasury market as traders reduced expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts. The move was led by the front end of the yield curve, reflecting a repricing of Fed policy expectations. The 2-year Treasury yield climbed 10.0 basis points to 4.15%, while the 5-year yield rose 7.9 basis points to 4.268. Longer-term yields also moved higher, with the benchmark 10-year yield increasing 5.5 basis points to 4.530% and the 30-year bond yield advancing 2.0 basis points to 4.996%. The steeper rise in shorter-dated yields highlighted the market's view that a resilient labor market and still-elevated inflation pressures could keep the Federal Reserve on hold for longer than previously anticipated.Stocks were mixed to start the day with the Dow higher and the S&P and Nasdaq lower (Nasdaq was down about 300 points going into the jobs report). The jobs report sent the stocks lower on the back up in yields Concerns about the events of the week with Alphabets floating of $85 billion of equity a reminder that AI is going to cost a lot, and that cost is now eating into shareowners value as equity gets diluted. In the past, stock owners benefited from buybacks of shares reversing dilution.. Now with the number of shares increasing, that idea is reversing The declines started to accelerate with both the S&P and NASDAQ indices closed closing below their 200 hour moving averages for the first time since April 2026. For the S&P index the 200 hour moving average comes in at 7404.33. The closing price was 7383.73. For the NASDAQ index the 200 hour moving averages at 26069.49 with a closing price well below that level at 25709.43. There were a number of losers which fell over 10% today including: In a unique week, Marvel Technology was one of the worst performers today with a decline of -16.74%, but one of the best performers for the week with a gain of 28.52%. Indicative of the craziness, it's stock is still up 210% for the year. The stock price this week reached a $324.20 before closing today at $263.47. The USD was stronger today with the AUD and the NZD the hardest hit vs the greenback. Below is an end of week video, outlining the technicals for those two pairs as the trading week comes to an end. Ranking the major currencies losses versus the greenback showed JPY -0.17% CAD -0.19% GBP -0.60% EUR -0.78% NZD -1.19% AUD -1.23% The price of gold reacted negatively to the higher yields and the higher dollar. Gold tumbled $147.17 or -3.29% for its worst day since March 20. For the week the price fell -4.614% Silver fell by $-6.02 or -8.15% (its worst day since May 15). For the week the price fell -9.837% Bitcoin continued its move to the downside fell more than 16% this week its worst one week % decline since October 2022 It raises an interesting question: Did some insiders have a rough day today? The markets will next prepare for Kevin Warsh's first meeting as the Fed chair, but before then, the CPI data will be released next week with expectations for a core gain of 0.5% and the YoY rising to 2.9% from 2.8%. The headline is expected to reach 4.2% from 3.8% last month. The Bank of Canada is expected to keep rates unchanged but with the strong jobs report it will be interesting to see if there is a shift. The ECB will also meet and the market has priced a 25 basis point hike. That has been pretty well telegraphed from policy makers already. This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.

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