Este artigo ainda não está disponível em Português. Exibindo versão em inglês.
Este artigo ainda não está disponível em Português. Exibindo versão em inglês.
The pair opened Monday at 0.79651 and closed Friday at 0.79663, marking a 12-pip gain or 0.15%. The week's high reached 0.80125 on Thursday before sellers stepped in, while support held firm at 0.79385. Daily volume averaged 59,785 contracts across the five trading days.
Thursday's spike to 0.80125 coincided with news that the PBOC set its daily reference rate significantly stronger than market estimates. This unexpected yuan weakness boosted the dollar across the board, pushing USDCHF through the psychological 0.8000 level briefly.
The subsequent pullback to 0.79505 showed the franc found buyers below 0.7940, but the overall weekly close above the open confirms dollar strength remains the dominant theme. Trading volumes on Friday dropped to just 13,035 contracts, typical for end-of-week position squaring.
No high-impact events appear on the calendar for the coming week. This leaves USDCHF vulnerable to broader dollar flows and any surprise developments from either the Fed or SNB. Watch how the pair handles the 0.8000 level: acceptance above could trigger stops toward 0.8050, while rejection might see a retest of this week's 0.79385 low.
Current positioning shows 54.3% of traders are long USDCHF versus 45.7% short as of Friday morning. This modest long bias suggests the market expects further franc weakness, though the skew isn't extreme enough to signal an overcrowded trade. The relatively balanced positioning leaves room for momentum in either direction.
The week's high at 0.80125 stands as immediate resistance. If price closes above it, the next obvious level sits at 0.8050. Support comes in at Thursday's low of 0.79385, then the round 0.7900 figure. A daily close below 0.7940 would shift the near-term bias back to the bears. Trade USDCHF and other major pairs with LHFX's competitive spreads by opening your account today.
Byline: LHFX Research
Risk disclaimer. CFD trading involves substantial risk and is not suitable for every investor. Leverage works both ways and can amplify losses beyond your initial deposit. The analysis above is general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any instrument. LHFX is regulated by the FSC Mauritius and the FSCA in South Africa.