The US Dollar (USD) remained under heavy pressure, slipping back to the area of multi-week lows, always amid steady bets for another interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve as soon as next week.
Canada’s November Labour Force Survey will be pivotal for judging whether recent job gains reflect genuine labour-market improvement or mere statistical noise.
The Chinese Yuan (CNY) appreciated to 7.0742 per US Dollar (USD) in November, its strongest level since October 2024, after the White House extended the suspension of reciprocal tariffs on Chinese imports until November 2026.
The Japanese Yen remains under pressure as markets test the BoJ’s tolerance amid lingering Japan-China tensions over Taiwan.
Japanese Yen (JPY) and South-Korean Won (KRW) have fallen sharply against the US Dollar (USD) over the past three months, prompting warnings from Tokyo and Seoul.
Geopolitical news should remain central today. The US has softened its stance on Thursday’s deadline for Ukraine to accept the peace deal with Russia, and a new 19-point deal is set to be discussed in the coming days.
USD/CNH dips to levels not seen since October 2024 as China’s private-sector manufacturing contracts, though the Chinese Yuan’s (CNH) undervaluation limits economic strain, BBH FX analysts report.
The Euro (EUR) remains undervalued versus the US Dollar (USD) despite Ukraine peace developments, while weak German business sentiment points to limited near-term upside, though EUR/USD could climb above 1.160 in the coming weeks, ING's FX analyst Francesco Pesole notes.
The final Swiss growth figures for the third quarter, published on Friday, were ultimately as poor as the initial estimate of growth adjusted for sport events, standing at -0.5% quarter-on-quarter. This was slightly below expectations, with the Bloomberg consensus predicting a contraction of 0.4%.
SB Seker is head of Asia Pacific at Binance, one of the largest centralized cryptocurrency exchanges. Seker steers regional strategy, operations, and regulatory engagement across Asia-Pacific markets.
With tariff tensions stabilising, policy makers’ focus has returned to domestic demand and innovation. GDP growth target likely to be set at 4.5-5.0% for 2026, with supportive macro policies.
Concerns over financial stress in the Russian banking system, which first emerged in June, continue to grow. Throughout the year, updates from banking officials and the development ministry have periodically highlighted these pressures, Commerzbank's FX analyst Tatha Ghose notes.
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary, Minoru Kihara, states during the European session on Monday that THE administration expects the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to conduct appropriate monetary policy operations to bring inflation sustainably to the desired target.