1. FX Outlook
  2. Daily FX Report
Daily FX Report

FX Moves Look Ripe for Mean Reversion

Read disclaimer

EUR / USD

Eurusd 05032026

Source: Massive (polygon.io) 

EUR/USD stabilised, trading in a narrow range around 1.1620–1.1645, below its clustered 20-day, 50-day, and 200-day moving averages near 1.1700–1.1800, which underscores the depth of the recent sell-off. The disruption to energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz caused by the Middle East conflict has created a stagflation dynamic for the Eurozone, with Deutsche Bank estimating roughly 0.8% euro compression for every combined 10% rise in Brent and European natural gas benchmarks, while the United States remains relatively insulated as a net energy exporter.

Divergent monetary policy trajectories are reinforcing dollar strength, as the Federal Reserve's delay in rate cuts contrasts sharply with the ECB's struggle to balance accelerating inflation with fragile growth, generating yield differentials that favour the greenback. Options market sentiment has turned dramatically bearish on the euro, reaching the most negative positioning in at least a year, while the daily RSI showed signs of a reversal from oversold territory, suggesting technical selling momentum could be abating.

We believe that the oversold RSI reading could trigger a short-term mean-reversion rally back toward the 200-day moving average near 1.1672. The outlook hinges critically on the duration of Middle East energy disruptions; prolonged supply constraints risk is likely to keep the pair fundamentally suppressed, allowing for a moderate technical bounce back.

USD / JPY

Usdjpy 05032026

Source: Massive (polygon.io) 

USD/JPY’s upside stalled on the back of dollar softness, finding resistance at the previous day’s highs of 158. The pair remains well above key support levels, including the 50-day SMA at 156 and the 100-day SMA around 155.30, with the daily RSI at 60 confirming the previous uptrend. The critical near-term battle lies between support at 156.9 and resistance at 157.4, with a breakout higher opening a path toward the January high near 159.3 - a level that approaches the 158-to-160 zone where Japanese authorities have historically intervened to curb excessive yen weakness.

While the Fed is expected to implement only approximately 37 basis points of rate cuts through 2026, the Bank of Japan has signalled further 25-basis-point hikes, yet the widening interest rate differential and the dollar's safe-haven appeal amid Middle East geopolitical tensions have kept the pair elevated. Surging crude oil prices have pushed back market expectations for Fed rate cuts from July to September, further reinforcing dollar strength.

The combination of resilient U.S. economic data, geopolitical uncertainty, and the ever-present risk of Japanese foreign-exchange intervention creates a complex yet fundamentally dollar-supportive environment that is likely to sustain upward pressure on the pair until energy markets stabilise or a clearer resolution emerges in the Middle East.

GBP / USD

Gbpusd 05032026

Source: Massive (polygon.io) 

GBP/USD faces a challenging confluence of macroeconomic and technical pressures, painting a predominantly bearish picture. Fundamentally, sterling is weighed down by elevated energy costs stemming from Middle East disruptions, with UK inflation already at 3% - well above the Bank of England's target - and the threat of an additional percentage point from the energy shock severely constraining the central bank's ability to pursue previously anticipated rate cuts. This policy dilemma is compounded by the UK's structural vulnerabilities, including anaemic growth barely above 1%, leaving the economy acutely exposed to external shocks as a net energy importer.

The technical picture reinforces this bearish outlook, with GBP/USD trading around 1.3372 and below the 20-day SMA at 1.3525. The daily RSI is near 35, signalling oversold conditions, which could invite a short-term mean-reversion bounce toward the 50-day SMA at 1.35, though any relief rally would likely encounter significant resistance.

Ultimately, the widening interest rate differential favouring the dollar suggests that, absent a material de-escalation in geopolitical tensions, the path of least resistance for GBP/USD remains to the downside toward the 1.3300 support area.

Economic Calendar

05032026

Contents

Disclaimer

This is a marketing communication. The information in this report is provided solely for informational purposes and should not be regarded as a recommendation to buy, sell or otherwise deal in any particular investment. Please be aware that, where any views have been expressed in this report, the author of this report may have had many, varied views over the past 12 months, including contrary views.

This report was prepared with the assistance of artificial intelligence.

A large number of views are being generated at all times and these may change quickly. Any valuations or underlying assumptions made are solely based upon the author’s market knowledge and experience.

Please contact the author should you require a copy of any previous reports for comparative purposes. Furthermore, the information in this report has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research. All information in this report is obtained from sources believed to be reliable and we make no representation as to its completeness or accuracy.

This report is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research. Accordingly, the information may have been acted upon by us for our own purposes and has not been procured for the exclusive benefit of customers. Sucden Financial believes that the information contained within this report is already in the public domain. Private customers should not invest in these products unless they are satisfied that the products are suitable for them and they have sought professional advice. Please read our full risk warnings and disclaimers.

Sign up to get the latest market insights

We will email you each time a new report has been published.

You might also be interested in...