iFOREX Daily Analysis : February 07,2017

 | Feb 07, 2017 03:29AM ET

The U.S. dollar rose against many major currencies on Monday while the euro fell to one-week lows after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi gave hints that the bank will probably not scale back its stimulus program in the near future.

The Aussie gained in Asia on Tuesday as the central bank held steady as expected, while noting better economic conditions with its key trading partner, China.

The dollar posted its fourth straight weekly decline last Friday after the latest U.S. employment report showed that while jobs growth beat expectations last month wage growth remained tepid.

According to the Fed Rate Monitor Tool less than 10% of traders expect the Fed to raise interest rates at its next meeting in March. The chance of a June increase is seen at just below 50%.

The dollar was lower against the yen, with USD/JPY down 0.18% while it reached one-week highs against the sterling with GBP/USD hitting 1.2450. The pound came under pressure as a parliamentary debate on a law giving Prime Minister Theresa May the right to trigger Brexit got underway.

Today, the UK is to publish a report on house price inflation, Canada is to release reports on trade, building permits and business activity and the U.S. is also to release its latest trade figures.

The European Commission is to release its latest economic forecasts for the European Union.

EUR/USD

The dollar gained ground against the euro, with EUR/USD falling 0.43% to 1.0736.

In the euro zone, data on Monday showed that German factory growth hit a two-and-a-half year high in January, with factory orders jumping by 5.2%. It was the strongest increase since January 2014.

Another report showed that investor sentiment in the euro area deteriorated slightly in February, amid concerns that the Trump administration’s policies will act as a drag on global growth.

Today, the U.S. will release its latest trade figures and tomorrow the European Commission is to release its latest economic forecasts for the European Union.