Week Ahead: Eurozone CPI Hits 3.2%, Nonfarm Payrolls Due Thursday and Fed Chair Warsh Speaks at Sintra as EUR/USD Holds 1.1383 | Technical Analysis – European Session Weekly | 27 June 2026
Week Ahead: Eurozone CPI Hits 3.2%, Nonfarm Payrolls Due Thursday and Fed Chair Warsh Speaks at Sintra as EUR/USD Holds 1.1383 and Silver Breaks $59
Eurozone CPI (1 Jul) · ISM Manufacturing (1 Jul) · Fed Chair Warsh at ECB Sintra (1 Jul) · ADP (30 Jun) · NFP Early Release (2 Jul) · US Markets Closed 3 Jul · Full European session trade ideas and economic calendar for 29 June – 3 July 2026
EUR/USD at 1.1383 is the most consequential European pair for the week. The pair’s advance through 1.13 has been driven by broad dollar softness, not ECB hawkishness, which means the move is vulnerable to any US data that challenges the soft-dollar narrative. Tuesday’s Eurozone flash CPI is the week’s first directional verdict: a hot print above 2.5% would add an independent ECB-hawkish leg to the rally, targeting 1.1480; a miss below 2.1% would expose the 1.1240 retracement level as the market reassesses whether the dollar weakness is overdone. CSFX’s framework is to buy pullbacks toward 1.1280 in a soft-dollar world, not to chase the pair at current levels.
GBP/USD at 1.3200 is at the most watched round-number level in G10 FX this week. Wednesday’s UK GDP final revision is the binary: an upward revision to 0.7% QoQ or better cements cable above 1.3200 and opens 1.3320 as the next target; a downward revision below 0.5% breaks the round number and returns the pair to the 1.3050–1.3100 zone. CSFX views the 1.3200 level as a hold-and-wait zone — entering fresh longs here requires GDP confirmation, not anticipation.
Silver at $59.14 is in genuine breakout territory, trading at levels last seen in 2011 as the combination of a weaker dollar, green-energy industrial demand, and tight above-ground supply have converged into a powerful structural trend. CSFX’s framework is to buy pullbacks toward $56.50 — the breakout base — rather than chase the metal at $59. The risk to the long thesis is a sharp dollar reversal driven by stronger-than-expected US ISM data Friday; a single strong print would not reverse the structural trend but could produce a meaningful intraweek retracement.
Crude oil at $70.12 is at a structural decision point. The OPEC+ supply-increase narrative has been the primary headwind, and the EIA inventory report Wednesday is the week’s key catalyst: a surprise build above 2 million barrels would trigger a test of the $68 support and pull the FTSE 100 energy sector lower. A meaningful draw, conversely, could stabilise oil near $71–72 and provide FTSE energy stocks with temporary relief. CSFX treats $70 as the line that defines the oil trade for the rest of the quarter — below it, the next meaningful support is $65.
In crypto, Ethereum at $1,580.86 and Litecoin at $42.33 stand apart from the broader risk-on backdrop. Both assets have declined in a week when equities and silver rallied, underscoring that the Fear & Greed Index at Extreme Fear (near 12) is generating crypto-specific selling pressure rather than macro-driven weakness. CSFX’s framework for both names is patient accumulation near the demand shelf — $1,500 for Ethereum and $40 for Litecoin — with ISM Friday as the macro catalyst most likely to shift crypto sentiment into the weekend.
Three Forces That Will Drive the European Session — 29 June to 3 July 2026
The catalysts, decisions, and data points that will set the direction across FX, commodities, equities, bonds, and digital assets in the week ahead
European Session Weekly Trade Ideas
Eight instrument-specific setups with entry, stop, and target levels for the week of 29 June – 3 July 2026. All levels for reference only; not financial advice. Visit capitalstreetfx.com for live signals.
Thesis — Buy CPI-Driven Pullbacks to 1.1280; Hot Inflation Adds the ECB Pillar That Cements the Rally
EUR/USD at 1.1383 has advanced sharply on broad dollar weakness, but the move lacks an independent ECB-hawkish pillar. Tuesday’s Eurozone flash CPI is the week’s directional switch: above 2.5% and the pair gains a second engine — ECB rate-cut bets being priced out — that can push it through 1.1400 and toward 1.1480. Below 2.1% and the pair faces a mean-reversion risk back to 1.1240 as dollar-weakness fatigue sets in. CSFX’s preferred trade is not to chase the pair at 1.1383 but to buy a CPI-driven pullback into 1.1280 — the prior week’s consolidation high that now acts as support — where the risk/reward is significantly cleaner.
The entry at 1.1280 sits just above the 1.1240 retracement level, with the stop at 1.1180 below the prior week’s range base. The take profit at 1.1480 reflects the next measured-move target if the dollar-weakness trend continues. CSFX recommends half-size into Tuesday’s CPI and adding on the confirmation of a hot print. A soft CPI miss is the signal to stand aside and reassess at 1.1240; CSFX will not chase the pair lower than 1.1240 without a fundamental shift in the ECB outlook.
Thesis — Buy the GDP-Confirmed Dip to 1.3120; 1.3200 Must Hold on Any Revision Surprise
GBP/USD at 1.3200 is at the most psychologically significant level in G10 FX this week. The round number is the pivot: Wednesday’s UK GDP final revision is the binary that determines whether cable sustains above 1.3200 or corrects into the 1.3050–1.3100 zone. CSFX’s base case is an unchanged or upward revision to 0.6–0.7% QoQ, which confirms sterling’s bull trend and opens 1.3320 as the next target. CSFX’s preferred entry is not at current levels but on any Wednesday GDP-driven dip into 1.3120 — the prior week’s breakout level — which would represent a clean pullback-and-reload opportunity in the cable uptrend.
The stop at 1.3030 protects against a downward GDP revision below 0.5% QoQ that breaks the round number cleanly and signals a BoE rate-cut repricing. The take profit at 1.3320 reflects the next measured target if the GDP confirms and the dollar continues its retreat. UK services PMI on Thursday is a secondary input — a hold above 53 would reinforce the BoE’s hold posture and validate the sterling bull case. CSFX will not add to cable longs above 1.3200 ahead of the GDP data; wait for the print, then act.
Thesis — Buy the Breakout Retest at $56.50; Green-Energy Demand and Weak Dollar Are the Structural Engines
Silver at $59.14 is in genuine multi-year breakout territory, trading above levels not seen since 2011 as the convergence of a weaker dollar, structurally elevated green-energy demand (solar panels, EV batteries, storage), and tight above-ground supply has created a compelling long-term bull case. CSFX’s framework for the week is not to chase silver at the current extended level but to wait for any pullback into the $56.50 breakout base — the prior consolidation high that is now support — and enter the continuation long there.
The tactical risk to the long thesis this week is an ISM Manufacturing Friday beat above 50 that reverses the dollar’s recent softness and compresses silver intraweek. CSFX treats such a pullback as a buying opportunity, not a trend reversal: the structural demand picture has not changed, and a dollar-driven correction to $56.50 is the preferred entry zone. Stop at $54.80 protects below the prior breakout shelf; target at $62.00 reflects the next meaningful resistance on the long-term monthly chart. CSFX will not add to silver positions above $59.14 without fresh macro confirmation from the ISM or a new green-energy demand catalyst.
Thesis — Short Intraday Rallies Toward $71.20; OPEC+ Supply and EIA Inventory Data Open $65
WTI crude at $70.12 sits on the most important structural support level of the year. The primary driver of the decline from above $80 has been OPEC+ supply-increase signalling, combined with soft Chinese industrial demand that has removed the demand-side cushion. At $70, the market is priced for a supply glut that has not yet fully materialised in the weekly inventory data — which is why the EIA report Wednesday is the week’s defining catalyst. A surprise build above 2 million barrels confirms the supply overhang and triggers a clean break below $70 toward $68, opening the $65 target by mid-July.
CSFX’s preferred entry for the crude oil short is intraday rallies toward $71.20 — the level where overhead resistance aligns with the broken prior support — with a stop at $73.50 above the last meaningful consolidation zone. The take profit at $65 reflects the next major structural support on the monthly chart. CSFX treats the FTSE 100 energy sector as a secondary confirmation: a close in BP or Shell below their respective 50-day moving averages alongside a crude break below $70 is the fullest confirmation signal for the short. A meaningful EIA draw that bounces crude above $72 is the signal to stand aside.
Thesis — Buy GDP-Driven Dips to 10,320; Record Territory Is Supported by Dollar Weakness and Financials Strength
The FTSE 100 at 10,473 is in record territory, a move driven primarily by gains in financials, consumer staples, and healthcare — the pound’s strength has been a headwind for the large multinational exporters, but not enough to offset the broad risk-on lift. CSFX’s framework at these levels is not to chase fresh longs at the record but to buy GDP-driven pullbacks toward 10,320 — the prior week’s range base — where the risk/reward for a continuation long is significantly better. The key downside catalyst is the intersection of Wednesday’s UK GDP revision and crude oil: a weak GDP print alongside an oil break below $70 would combine to pull the FTSE below 10,320, opening 10,180 as the next support.
CSFX’s preferred trade is therefore a hold at current levels with a plan to buy dips to 10,320 if the GDP revision is confirmed or upward, targeting 10,680 as the next measured-move resistance. Stop at 10,180 protects against a compounded negative catalyst (weak GDP plus oil breakdown). The pound’s strength is the FTSE’s structural headwind at record levels — any sustained GBP/USD move above 1.3320 would increase the headwind for multinational earners and could cap the index even in a positive macro environment. CSFX will reassess the long thesis if both GDP disappoints and oil breaks $70.
Thesis — Fade Yield Spikes Toward 2.80%; Soft Eurozone CPI Is the Bullish Bond Catalyst That Pulls Yields to 2.48%
EU 10-year Bund yields at 2.68% are stable but sit at the crossroads of two competing forces: the softer US rates environment (which pulls Bund yields lower through global rate correlation) and French political risk premium (which pushes them higher through spread dynamics). Tuesday’s Eurozone flash CPI is the week’s directional binary for yields: a soft print below 2.1% is the cleanest bullish bond catalyst, pulling yields toward 2.48% as the market prices in earlier ECB easing; a hot print above 2.5% extends yields toward the 2.80% resistance as rate-cut expectations are pushed further out.
CSFX treats 2.80% as the yield level at which ECB communication is most likely to push back — a move to that zone would be unusual given the current rate path. The invalidation at 2.92% signals that the market is pricing a genuinely hawkish ECB repricing, which would require both a very hot CPI and a significant French political escalation. French OAT–Bund spread above 80 basis points is the secondary risk-off signal CSFX is watching; spread widening to that level would be the unscheduled catalyst that lifts Bund yields independently of the macro data, as a flight-to-safety bid into German paper would normally compress yields, but French contagion risk can overwhelm that dynamic temporarily.
Thesis — Patient Accumulation at the $1,500 Demand Shelf; ISM Softness and Dollar Weakness Are the Recovery Catalysts
Ethereum at $1,580.86 has declined in a week when equities and silver rallied sharply, a divergence that underscores the crypto-specific nature of the current Extreme Fear cycle. The Fear & Greed Index at 12 is generating indiscriminate selling that has decoupled Ethereum from the broader risk-on backdrop. CSFX does not view this as a structural Ethereum problem — on-chain fundamentals including network fee revenue, staking yields, and layer-2 activity have not deteriorated materially — but rather a sentiment-driven washout that creates a patient accumulation opportunity at the $1,500 demand shelf.
The entry at $1,500 sits on the multi-month structural support level that has held on two previous tests. The stop at $1,380 protects against a clean break below structural support that would invalidate the accumulation thesis. The target at $1,820 reflects a recovery back toward the pre-fear-cycle range before the current washout began. CSFX treats Friday’s ISM Manufacturing as the macro catalyst most likely to shift crypto sentiment — a sub-48 print that weakens the dollar further is the cleanest entry point confirmation. CSFX sizes Ethereum conservatively given the binary sentiment risk and will not average down below $1,380.
Thesis — Weakness Into the $40 Shelf; Accumulate Ahead of the Halving Narrative and ISM-Driven Dollar Softness
Litecoin at $42.33 has broken below the $45 demand zone this week, declining sharply in a period when broader risk assets advanced. The selloff is sentiment-driven — the same Extreme Fear crypto cycle that is weighing on Ethereum — rather than a reflection of any Litecoin-specific fundamental deterioration. The halving narrative (Litecoin’s next block-reward halving is expected within 12 months) is the primary medium-term fundamental anchor that CSFX views as the support mechanism keeping institutional accumulation interest alive near the $40 shelf.
CSFX’s framework is patient accumulation on dips into $40.00 — the structural support that aligns with the post-April consolidation base — with a stop at $35.50 below the historical demand zone. The target at $52.00 reflects a recovery back toward the broken $45 zone and a partial retracement of the current Extreme Fear washout. As with Ethereum, CSFX sizes Litecoin positions conservatively and treats Friday’s ISM as the nearest macro sentiment catalyst. A soft ISM print that weakens the dollar and shifts the Fear & Greed Index higher is the scenario where both ETH and LTC make their sharpest bounce off the demand shelves. CSFX will not add below $35.50.
What Could Move European Markets Sharply This Week
The scheduled and unscheduled events that CSFX is watching most closely for the European session, 29 June – 3 July 2026
European Session — Economic Calendar, 29 June – 3 July 2026
All times in London (BST). Key releases for EUR/USD, GBP/USD, Silver, Crude Oil, FTSE 100, EU 10Y, Ethereum, and Litecoin.
| Day | Time (BST) | Release | Impact | Forecast | CSFX View |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monday, 29 June | |||||
| Mon | 09:00 BST | Eurozone Unemployment Rate (May) | LOW | 6.2% | Scene-setter for Tuesday’s CPI. A tight labour market reading reinforces the sticky-services-inflation narrative and raises the stakes for the flash CPI. Unlikely to move EUR/USD at 1.1383 independently, but a surprise spike in unemployment could soften the pair toward 1.1320 ahead of the data. |
| Mon | 10:00 BST | Germany Retail Sales (May) | MED | +0.3% m/m | German consumer demand signals ahead of Tuesday’s CPI. A beat would provide minor EUR/USD lift. A miss deepens the narrative of sticky services inflation coexisting with soft German domestic demand, which is the ECB’s current dilemma. |
| Tuesday, 1 July | |||||
| Tue | 10:00 BST | Eurozone Flash CPI (June) | HIGH | 2.3% YoY | The week’s highest-impact European release and the directional switch for EUR/USD at 1.1383. Above 2.5% adds the ECB-hawkish pillar to the dollar-weakness rally and opens 1.1480. Below 2.1% triggers a mean-reversion to 1.1240. Services inflation (consensus 4.1%) is the critical sub-component to watch. |
| Tue | 15:00 BST | US JOLTS Job Openings (May) | MED | 7.8M | Secondary USD input. A tight US labour market read would modestly offset any EUR/USD gains from a hot CPI. A soft JOLTS surprise reinforces the dollar-weakness narrative that is currently supporting EUR/USD at multi-month highs, silver at $59.14, and the FTSE 100 record. |
| Wednesday, 2 July | |||||
| Wed | 07:00 BST | UK Final Q1 GDP Revision | HIGH | +0.6% QoQ | The binary event for GBP/USD at 1.3200 and FTSE 100 at 10,473. Upward revision above 0.7% QoQ cements cable above 1.3200 and opens 1.3320. Downward miss below 0.5% breaks the round number, opens 1.3050, and — combined with crude oil at $70 — risks pulling the FTSE toward 10,180. |
| Wed | 09:30 BST | UK Manufacturing PMI Final (June) | MED | 48.4 | A below-48 read alongside a weak GDP revision is the compounded bear catalyst for GBP/USD and the FTSE. A beat above 50 would complicate the bear case for cable and provide modest FTSE support despite energy sector headwinds from crude oil at $70.12. |
| Wed | 15:30 BST | EIA Crude Oil Inventory Report | HIGH | −1.2M bbls | The midweek binary for WTI crude at $70.12. A surprise build above 2M barrels breaks the $70 floor and triggers CSFX’s short toward $65; a meaningful draw bounces crude toward $72 and provides FTSE energy stocks temporary relief. The most actionable intraday entry signal for the crude oil short setup. |
| Thursday, 3 July | |||||
| Thu | 09:30 BST | UK Services PMI Final (June) | MED | 52.8 | The UK economy’s primary growth engine. A hold above 52 limits GBP/USD downside even after a weak GDP revision and keeps FTSE 100 domestically supported. A drop below 51 is the scenario where CSFX adds conviction to the cable setup and watches for FTSE 100 confirmation below 10,320. |
| Thu | 13:30 BST | US Weekly Initial Jobless Claims | MED | 219K | Pre-ISM labour market check. A spike above 240K would be an early signal that Friday’s ISM could disappoint, providing a preview of the potential dollar-negative outcome that benefits EUR/USD above 1.1383, silver above $59, and could finally begin resolving the crypto Extreme Fear divergence. |
| Friday, 4 July (US Holiday — ISM Pre-Holiday Release) | |||||
| Fri | 15:00 BST | US ISM Manufacturing PMI (June) | HIGH | 48.8 | The week’s closing macro catalyst and the clearest dollar-directional input. Below 48: EUR/USD through 1.1400, silver continuation toward $61, Ethereum bounce off $1,500, Litecoin bounce off $40. Above 50: EUR/USD retracement to 1.1240, silver pullback to $56.50 entry zone, crude oil short confirmation. CSFX uses this as the portfolio-wide risk signal for the following week’s positioning. |
European Session — Trader Questions Answered
Key questions from CSFX clients ahead of the Eurozone CPI binary, the UK GDP revision, the $70 crude oil defence, silver’s multi-year breakout, and the crypto Extreme Fear divergence
CSFX View: The European Session Navigates EUR/USD at 1.1383, Silver’s Multi-Year Breakout, and Crude Oil’s $70 Defence in a Dollar-Softening Week
The week of 29 June – 3 July 2026 presents a divergent European landscape. EUR/USD has surged to 1.1383 and GBP/USD to 1.3200 as broad dollar weakness dominates, silver has broken out to $59.14 at multi-year highs on green-energy demand, and the FTSE 100 has advanced into record territory at 10,473 led by financials and consumer staples. Against this risk-on backdrop, crude oil at $70.12 sits at a structural precipice as OPEC+ supply signals intensify, and crypto — in a conspicuous divergence — remains in Extreme Fear with Ethereum at $1,580.86 and Litecoin at $42.33 falling while equities and silver rally.
In FX, EUR/USD and GBP/USD have earned their levels on the dollar-weakness trade, but neither should be chased without domestic data confirmation — Tuesday’s Eurozone CPI and Wednesday’s UK GDP revision are the binary events that determine whether these are launchpads or exhaustion points. In commodities, silver’s breakout above $59 is the week’s most structurally compelling move, but the tactical buy is at the $56.50 retest, not the current price. Crude oil’s defence of $70 is the week’s most asymmetric risk: below that level, CSFX’s short opens the mid-$60s; above it, the short stand aside. EU 10-year yields at 2.68% are the region’s hidden risk barometer — French spread widening above 80 basis points is the unscheduled variable CSFX is watching most closely.
CSFX’s highest-conviction setups for the week are: a crude oil short at $71.20 (the clearest fundamental bear case with the EIA as the midweek trigger), a EUR/USD long on pullbacks to 1.1280 (post-CPI confirmation buy), and patient Ethereum accumulation at $1,500 (Extreme Fear demand shelf ahead of the ISM-driven sentiment shift). GBP/USD is a buy at 1.3120 on GDP confirmation; silver is a buy at the $56.50 breakout retest; the FTSE 100 is a buy on GDP-driven dips to 10,320; EU 10-year yields are a fade at 2.80% on a soft CPI; and Litecoin is a $40.00 accumulation play into the halving-narrative support zone. CSFX will issue intra-week alerts if Eurozone CPI delivers a material surprise in either direction, if crude oil breaks below $70 on the EIA print, if French political noise pushes OAT–Bund spreads above 80 basis points, or if the crypto fear cycle begins to break. Follow all updates at capitalstreetfx.com.
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