09/02/2026
Daily Currency Market Update – Monday, 9 February 2026
Market Overview
The new week opens with the US Dollar under pressure as markets digest last week’s soft US labour data and rising expectations of earlier Federal Reserve rate cuts. The USD Index has slipped below 97.00, weighed down further by reports that China is advising institutions to reduce exposure to US Treasuries.
Risk sentiment is mixed. Asian markets reacted positively to Japan’s election outcome, while European equities opened cautiously. The delayed US Nonfarm Payrolls and CPI reports — due Wednesday and Friday — will dominate the week’s agenda.
Sterling is attempting to recover after last week’s dovish BoE surprise, while the Euro is supported by improving investor sentiment across the Eurozone.
GBP/EUR
GBP/EUR ~1.1480
The cross weakens as the Euro benefits from improved sentiment and UK political uncertainty.
Drivers
Outlook: GBP/EUR remains vulnerable to further UK political headlines and Eurozone sentiment improvements.
GBP/USD
GBP/USD ~1.3670
Sterling rallies as the Dollar slides on China Treasury‑reduction rumours.
Drivers
Outlook: GBP/USD direction hinges on US data this week; political noise remains a drag on Sterling.
EUR/USD
EUR/USD ~1.19
The Euro extends gains as sentiment improves and the USD weakens.
Drivers
Outlook: EUR/USD remains supported while USD sentiment stays fragile; upside capped by risk‑off equity moves.
AUD/USD
AUD/USD ~0.7080
The Australian Dollar rises for a second session as risk sentiment stabilises.
Drivers
Outlook: AUD/USD remains constructive above 0.7000; US data later this week will determine momentum.
USD/CAD
USD/CAD ~1.3570
The pair slips below 1.3600 as the USD weakens and oil prices firm.
Drivers
Outlook: USD/CAD bias remains lower unless US data surprises to the upside.
USD/CHF
USD/CHF ~0.7680
The Dollar declines as dovish Fed expectations build.
Drivers
Outlook: USD/CHF likely to remain heavy ahead of US NFP and CPI later this week.
Final Summary
The US Dollar opens the week on the back foot as weak labour data, China Treasury‑reduction rumours, and rising Fed‑cut expectations weigh on sentiment. Sterling recovers modestly but remains constrained by UK political instability and dovish BoE expectations. The Euro strengthens on improved investor sentiment, while the Australian Dollar benefits from a firmer risk tone and hawkish RBA signals. CAD gains on stable oil prices and a softer USD, and CHF remains supported by safe‑haven flows. The delayed US NFP and CPI reports will be the key drivers for FX markets in the days ahead.