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Recently, I reviewed the movements of EUR/USD at the beginning of the year and noticed something interesting about how the market reacted to U.S. unemployment data. The pair was under pressure for several consecutive days, hovering around 1.1662, while the dollar was strengthening quite a bit.
What drove this was the unemployment claim numbers. Initial claims reached 208,000, slightly better than expected but with a moving average showing some weakness. What caught my attention most was that continued unemployment claims rose to 1.914 million, indicating that more people were still receiving benefits. These unemployment data typically generate volatility in pairs like EUR/USD because the labor market is key to monetary policy decisions.
The dollar responded by strengthening for the third consecutive day, with the DXY index reaching high levels around 98.88. But what was curious was that other labor market indicators showed mixed signals: the private employment ADP report came in weak, and job openings also declined. Basically, unemployment and overall labor dynamics suggested the economy was cooling down, though without dramatic drops.
In retrospect, these movements reflected uncertainty about how many rate cuts would follow. The currency market is always sensitive to these unemployment readings because they shape the direction of central banks. At that time, EUR/USD was caught between the relative weakness of the euro and the dollar’s strength driven by resilient but somewhat shaky labor data.