EUR/USD: Reaches Two Year High Above 1.39

 | Mar 10, 2014 01:19AM ET

In the last few days the euro has surged up higher through the long term resistance level at 1.38 and through 1.39 to reach a new two year high.  After recently falling sharply through the key 1.37 level and reaching a two week low in the process, the euro finished out a couple of weeks ago surging higher to just above 1.38.  It was however quickly rejected at that level and forced back down below 1.38. Throughout the first half of February the euro enjoyed a solid move higher moving from support around 1.35 up to test the key level at 1.37. It was able to move through the 1.37 level before consolidating and spending the best part of the last couple of weeks resting on support at that level. To finish out January the euro continued its decline and moved to a two month low touching below the support level at 1.35.

For the last couple of months the euro has generally steadied and established a trading range roughly between 1.3550 and the recent resistance level at 1.38, however to finish out several weeks ago the euro broke down through the support level at 1.3550. The 1.3550 level has become a key level over recent times and a couple of weeks ago the euro sprung off it to a two week high at the resistance level at 1.37 where it has spent several days consolidating before dropping sharply back to the key 1.3550 level again. After placing some pressure on the resistance level at 1.38 several weeks ago, the euro has since fallen sharply down to its lowest level in two months. Through November the euro enjoyed a solid move higher which saw it return to a wall of resistance at 1.38 and in doing so move to a then six week high. In the few days afterwards the euro challenged the 1.38 resistance level again before being turned away yet again. In mid November the euro did well to bounce strongly off support at 1.34 and recover the lost ground from the previous couple of days which saw it fall from the resistance level around 1.3550. This was after a few weeks which saw it move steadily higher from a support level at 1.33 back up to a three week high just above 1.3550. Over the last few months 1.3550 has been a key level.

Towards the end of October the euro enjoyed a strong surge higher to move through to its highest level in nearly two years just above 1.38 before spending that week content to consolidate around this level. Over the following three weeks it fell heavily down to a support level at 1.33 before recovering well. It moved quite well throughout the middle of October after breaking higher from its sideways range. For the month leading up to that, the euro traded within a narrow range between 1.3450 and 1.3650 before the range narrowed down to between 1.35 and 1.36. The former level of 1.35 was strongly tested a few weeks ago and has resurfaced as a significant level presently.

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The european Central Bank (ECB) upped its growth forecast for 2014 on Thursday, sending the euro higher, but downgraded its outlook for inflation.   Speaking at his monthly press conference, ECB President Mario Draghi predicted the euro zone economy would grow by 1.2 percent this year. This was better than the 1.1 percent growth forecast issued by the central bank at the end of last year.   "The ongoing recovery is expected to proceed, albeit it at a slow pace," Draghi told journalists in Frankfurt, Germany. He reiterated that risks to the euro area remained "to the downside."    Growth in 2015 and 2016 is seen at 1.5 percent and 1.8 percent respectively.   Draghi downgraded the ECB's inflation outlook for 2014 to 1.0 percent, from the 1.1 percent forecast at the end of last year -- well below the central bank's targeted level of "close to" 2 percent.   He reiterated that the euro zone was facing a "prolonged period of low inflation", but declined comparisons with Japan, which suffered deflation during the 1990s.