03/03/2026
Daily Currency Market Update – Wednesday, 4 February 2026
Market Overview
Markets are subdued in early European trading as investors await a heavy round of macro releases. Eurozone inflation (HICP) is the main focus today, followed by US ADP Employment and the ISM Services PMI — both taking on added importance after the partial US government shutdown forced the postponement of Friday’s Nonfarm Payrolls.
The shutdown formally ended late Tuesday after the House approved a funding package, though markets largely ignored the development. The US Dollar Index trades sideways below 97.50, while US equity futures show modest gains.
GBP/EUR
GBP/EUR ~1.1580
The cross stabilises near a five‑month high as traders avoid large positioning ahead of Thursday’s ECB and BoE policy announcements.
Drivers
Outlook: GBP/EUR likely to remain range‑bound until central‑bank guidance becomes clearer.
GBP/USD
GBP/USD ~1.3725
Sterling trades slightly firmer as the Dollar softens ahead of key US data.
Drivers
Outlook: GBP/USD remains supported but sensitive to US data surprises.
EUR/USD
EUR/USD ~1.1825
The Euro holds modest gains despite weaker services activity across the bloc.
Drivers
Outlook: EUR/USD remains vulnerable to today’s inflation data.
AUD/USD
AUD/USD ~0.7010
The Australian Dollar holds firm after Tuesday’s RBA hike and strong domestic and Chinese PMIs.
Drivers
Outlook: AUD/USD remains constructive while above 0.6950.
USD/CAD
USD/CAD ~1.3640
The pair trades steadily as lower oil prices weigh on CAD.
Drivers
Outlook: USD/CAD likely to remain range‑bound until US data provides clarity.
USD/CHF
USD/CHF ~0.7750
The pair trades flat as markets await US data and monitor SNB commentary.
Drivers
Outlook: USD/CHF remains biased lower on risk‑off episodes.
Final Summary
Markets are in a holding pattern ahead of Eurozone inflation and key US data. Sterling and the Euro remain steady ahead of Thursday’s BoE and ECB decisions, while the Australian Dollar outperforms following the RBA’s hawkish hike. The US Dollar trades cautiously as the shutdown delays key labour releases, increasing the importance of today’s ADP and ISM Services PMI. CAD and CHF remain range‑bound, driven by oil prices and safe‑haven flows respectively.