Forex Market Analysis — March 6, 2026 | EUR/USD · GBP/USD · USD/CAD · USD/CHF
Forex Market Analysis · Edition #47
NFP Friday Meets Geopolitical Fire — Markets on Edge as USD Surges
Today’s session is one of the highest-stakes trading environments of Q1 2026. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics drops the February Non-Farm Payrolls report at 08:30 ET — and markets enter it already in a state of elevated volatility. The escalating US-Israel military campaign against Iran has now entered its seventh day, crude oil is spiking, and the USD is posting its best weekly gain since January on safe-haven flows. The DXY has climbed back above 99.10, its highest level since mid-January. All four pairs covered in this report — EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/CAD and USD/CHF — are materially affected. Position accordingly, manage your risk, and read every line of this brief before you trade.
EUR / USD
1.1606
▼ Bearish pressure
Below 1.1725 support
GBP / USD
1.3340
▼ Pulling back
Stagflation risk on GBP
USD / CAD
1.4320
▲ USD demand
Oil offset vs USD bid
USD / CHF
0.8980
▲ Choppy / firm
SNB intervention risk
📋 Contents of This Report
Macro Overview & Market Narrative
We are heading into the most volatile session of the week — possibly the most volatile in Q1 2026. Three dominant forces are simultaneously driving forex markets, and understanding the interaction between them is the key to positioning profitably today.
1.1 — The Middle East War Premium
The US-Israeli military campaign against Iran is in its seventh consecutive day. Iran has retaliated with missile and drone strikes across the Gulf, and its navy has threatened to restrict passage through the Strait of Hormuz — a critical artery for roughly 20% of global oil supply. This is not just an energy story; it is a macroeconomic story. Higher oil prices feed directly into CPI readings globally. For the Eurozone and UK — both heavily dependent on imported energy — this is particularly damaging. The EUR and GBP are therefore bearing a structurally larger burden than the USD, which benefits from America’s relative energy independence and safe-haven flows.
Markets have repriced Federal Reserve rate cut expectations sharply. Earlier this week, traders were pricing in two cuts for 2026, with the first expected in July. By Thursday, that expectation had been pushed back to September or October, with only a single cut now fully priced. This hawkish repricing has been the primary engine behind the DXY’s march back above 99.00.
1.2 — NFP Day: February Jobs Report
The February Non-Farm Payrolls report releases at 08:30 ET today. The consensus estimate (Dow Jones survey) is +50,000 jobs, which would be a significant cooldown from January’s surprise print of +130,000. January itself came in well above the forecast of 70,000, which had provided temporary USD support in mid-February. The January beat was driven primarily by healthcare (+82K), social assistance (+42K), and construction (+33K), while the federal government shed 34,000 workers.
Today’s report carries extra weight because it also incorporates population control adjustments to the household survey — a technical revision that could shift the unemployment rate and wage data independently of actual labor market conditions. Traders who are only watching the headline NFP number could be caught off-guard if the unemployment rate or average hourly earnings diverge meaningfully.
| Scenario | NFP Range | USD Reaction | EUR/USD Impact | GBP/USD Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hawkish Beat | > 90,000 | Strong rally | Drop toward 1.1500 | Test 1.3200 |
| In-Line | 40,000–90,000 | Muted / choppy | Range 1.1580–1.1720 | Range 1.3280–1.3450 |
| Dovish Miss | < 40,000 | Sharp pullback | Bounce to 1.1780+ | Bounce to 1.3500+ |
| Negative Payrolls | Negative | Volatility spike | Surge possible | Surge possible |
1.3 — Trump Tariff Shock
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed this week that President Trump’s proposed 15% global tariff is set to take effect imminently. This is a materially bullish development for the USD on a structural basis — tariffs tend to reduce imports (cutting demand for foreign currencies) and keep domestic inflation pressures elevated (reducing the urgency for the Fed to cut). For EUR/USD specifically, EU trade with the US runs in the billions per month; the tariff shock adds to the pair’s bearish backdrop.
Economic Calendar — High-Impact Events (Next 24 Hours)
The table below covers high-impact events only from the USA, UK, Japan, Australia, Europe, and China, due over the next 24 hours from time of publication (08:00 GMT, March 6, 2026).
| Time (GMT) | Country | Event | Impact | Forecast | Previous | FX Implication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13:30 | 🇺🇸 USA | Non-Farm Payrolls (Feb) | High | +50K | +130K | USD volatility spike expected. Beat = strong USD rally; miss = USD drop |
| 13:30 | 🇺🇸 USA | Unemployment Rate (Feb) | High | 4.4% | 4.4% | Rise toward 4.6% would revive March cut odds; watch closely |
| 13:30 | 🇺🇸 USA | Avg Hourly Earnings MoM (Feb) | High | +0.3% | +0.4% | Hot wages = inflation concern = USD bullish; soft wages = USD bearish |
| 13:30 | 🇺🇸 USA | Avg Hourly Earnings YoY (Feb) | High | 3.7% | 4.1% | Above 4% would be hawkish for Fed; below 3.5% would be dovish |
| 15:00 | 🇺🇸 USA | University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (Prelim, Mar) | Med | 62.0 | 64.7 | Sentiment drop = risk-off; may compound post-NFP moves |
| 00:30 (Sat) | 🇯🇵 Japan | Labour Cash Earnings YoY (Jan) | High | 3.3% | 4.8% | Strong wages support BoJ normalisation; JPY positive if beat |
| 00:30 (Sat) | 🇯🇵 Japan | Household Spending YoY (Jan) | High | -2.2% | +2.7% | Weak spending = BoJ caution; JPY may soften; USD/JPY upside |
| All Day | 🇨🇳 China | NPC Legislative Meeting Ongoing | High | GDP ~5% | — | Fiscal target announcements; CNY stability; indirect AUD/CAD impact |
| All Day | 🇬🇧 UK | BoE Speakers (ongoing monitoring) | Med | — | — | Any stagflation commentary = GBP negative; any hawkish tone = GBP lift |
| All Day | 🇪🇺 Europe | ECB Commentary / Data Watch | Med | — | — | Oil-driven inflation could complicate ECB rate path; EUR sensitive |
EUR/USD — Detailed Technical Analysis
Daily Range (Est.)
1.1550 — 1.1720
Weekly Trend
Bearish Correction
Key Support
1.1580 / 1.1500
Key Resistance
1.1725 / 1.1780
200-Day MA
1.1350 (Price above)
RSI (Daily)
~42 — Softening
Trend Analysis
EUR/USD reached a multi-year high near 1.1815 earlier this month, driven by broad USD weakness, Fed rate cut speculation, and positive Eurozone sentiment. However, the pair has since reversed sharply, now trading around 1.1606 — a drop of over 200 pips from its February peak. The reversal was sparked by the DXY recovering safe-haven bids as the Middle East war escalated, and has been reinforced by strong US services data (ISM Services at a 3.5-year high) that has pushed back Fed easing expectations.
On the daily chart, EUR/USD has broken below its minor bullish trend line and is now testing the 1.1680–1.1725 zone (which was prior support from February). A confirmed daily close below 1.1680 targets the 1.1580–1.1634 support cluster. The pair’s medium-term bullish structure only reasserts itself on a reclaim of 1.1780+. The weekly candle is on track for a bearish close — the first in four weeks — which shifts the near-term bias firmly lower. Bears are in control ahead of NFP.
Moving Averages & Indicators
Candlestick Patterns (Daily / H4)
The most significant pattern was the Shooting Star that formed at the 1.1815 resistance zone, followed by a clean Bearish Engulfing on the daily chart — a classic two-candle reversal sequence that experienced traders would have identified as a high-probability short signal. The H4 chart currently shows a Doji at the 1.1600 psychological level, suggesting price is pausing before making its next directional decision — which will likely be decided by today’s NFP data.
Trade Setup — Primary (Bearish)
SHORT Setup — Sell the Rally on NFP Relief
Entry Zone
1.1700–1.1725
Stop Loss
1.1790
Take Profit
1.1500
Risk : Reward
~2.5 : 1
Trade Setup — Alternative (Bullish NFP Miss)
LONG Setup — Only on NFP Miss + Daily Close Above 1.1725
Entry Zone
1.1725–1.1750
Stop Loss
1.1660
Take Profit
1.1900
Risk : Reward
~2.3 : 1
GBP/USD — Detailed Technical Analysis
Daily Range (Est.)
1.3260 — 1.3430
Medium-Term Trend
Bullish (intact above 1.3641)
Key Support
1.3280 / 1.3200
Key Resistance
1.3450 / 1.3780
Fibonacci Target
1.3901 (100% projection)
RSI (Daily)
~48 — Neutral/Soft
Trend Analysis
GBP/USD has been the standout performer among dollar pairs over the past two months, showing genuine trending capacity. The pair broke above the 2025 high of 1.3787, establishing a new bull structure that remains intact as long as the 1.3641 support zone holds. However, the current environment has forced a meaningful pullback — from 1.3867 (42-day highs) to the current area around 1.3340. The pair has given back roughly 530 pips in under two weeks.
The fundamental backdrop for sterling is complicated. The UK economy is facing stagflation risks: higher global energy prices (from the Middle East war) threaten to push UK CPI higher, even as the labour market shows signs of cooling (unemployment at 5.2% in Q1 2026). This is the worst possible environment for the BoE — raising rates would crush growth, while cutting rates would entrench inflation. The BoE is effectively frozen, and the pound is paying the price. Institutional data shows asset managers’ gross shorts on GBP have risen to a 3.5-year high — a data point that experienced traders should treat as a significant warning signal.
Moving Averages & Indicators
Candlestick Patterns (Daily / H4)
The daily Evening Star at the 1.3867 high was textbook — a gap up, a doji day (indecision), followed by a strong red candle close well into the prior green body. This pattern historically carries a high success rate at major resistance levels and was a clean entry signal for sellers. The H4 Hammer at 1.3320 suggests buyers are beginning to defend, but this needs a confirmed close above 1.3380 to be actionable for bulls.
Trade Setup — Primary (Bearish Continuation / Fade Rally)
SHORT Setup — Sell Rallies Into Resistance
Entry Zone
1.3420–1.3450
Stop Loss
1.3510
Take Profit
1.3200
Risk : Reward
~3.7 : 1
Trade Setup — Alternative (Buy-the-Dip, longer horizon)
LONG Setup — Structural Buy Zone (Swing)
Entry Zone
1.3200–1.3250
Stop Loss
1.3140
Take Profit
1.3640
Risk : Reward
~4.0 : 1
USD/CAD — Detailed Technical Analysis
Daily Range (Est.)
1.4250 — 1.4420
Overall Trend
USD Bullish (hesitating)
Key Support
1.4250 / 1.4100
Key Resistance
1.4400 / 1.4550
Oil Correlation
Inverse (oil up → CAD up)
RSI (Daily)
~54 — Neutral
Trend Analysis
USD/CAD is the most complex pair in today’s brief because two powerful forces are pulling in opposite directions. On one hand, broad USD strength (safe-haven flows, delayed Fed cuts, tariff shock) is pushing USD/CAD higher. On the other hand, surging crude oil prices — driven by the Middle East supply threat — are providing a meaningful offset in favor of the Canadian dollar, since Canada is a major oil exporter and benefits when energy prices rise. The net result has been a choppy, range-bound market that has struggled to sustain directional breakouts this week.
Institutional positioning reveals large speculators have driven net-long exposure in CAD futures to a 4.5-year high — a contrarian warning sign that could accelerate any USD/CAD pullback if oil continues to rally. Technically, the pair has been in a mild USD-bullish trend since mid-2025, but the 1.4000 level held as significant resistance before the current push above 1.42. A clean daily close above 1.4420 would open a run to 1.4550.
Moving Averages & Indicators
Candlestick Patterns (Daily / H4)
The weekly candle for USD/CAD is tracking as a bullish close for the second consecutive week, even as the DXY posted losses on certain sessions — a sign of relative CAD weakness rather than pure USD strength. The Rising Three Methods pattern on the H4 is a textbook bullish continuation signal that has been playing out across this week’s session; however, the Spinning Top on the daily near 1.4400 warns of indecision at that resistance. The NFP will be the decisive catalyst — a strong print pushes USD/CAD toward 1.4420–1.4550; a weak print returns price to 1.4250.
Trade Setup — Primary (Buy Dip in Uptrend)
LONG Setup — Buy Pullback in USD Bull Trend
Entry Zone
1.4260–1.4290
Stop Loss
1.4190
Take Profit
1.4490
Risk : Reward
~3.0 : 1
Trade Setup — Alternative (Oil Surge / CAD Bull)
SHORT Setup — If Oil Spikes >5% Intraday
Entry Zone
1.4380–1.4420
Stop Loss
1.4480
Take Profit
1.4200
Risk : Reward
~3.0 : 1
USD/CHF — Detailed Technical Analysis
Daily Range (Est.)
0.8920 — 0.9050
Overall Trend
Range-Bound / Complex
Key Support
0.8920 / 0.8860
Key Resistance
0.9050 / 0.9120
SNB Watch
Active Intervention Risk
RSI (Daily)
~50 — Neutral
Trend Analysis
USD/CHF is perhaps the trickiest major pair to trade in the current environment, and here is why: the pair has two safe-haven currencies on either side. When global risk sentiment deteriorates — as it has this week — both the USD and the CHF attract safe-haven inflows. The outcome depends on which safe-haven narrative dominates at any given moment. Currently, the USD’s combination of safe-haven status and yield advantage (Fed on hold) is winning, but the CHF’s structural safe-haven appeal (geopolitical hedge, SNB credibility) provides a strong counterweight.
Institutional data shows asset managers are net-short CHF by 55,200 contracts — fewer than 500 contracts from a record high. This extreme positioning carries embedded short-covering risk: if geopolitical risk spikes further (say, a major escalation around the Strait of Hormuz), the CHF could receive sudden, violent safe-haven inflows, triggering a short squeeze in USD/CHF that pushes the pair sharply toward 0.8800 or lower. The SNB historically intervenes when EUR/CHF, not USD/CHF, reaches extreme levels, but the spillover pressure is real. The 0.76 level in EUR/CHF (EUR/CHF currently around 0.93) is cited as a potential floor by analysts, but the broader point is that SNB intervention risk adds unpredictability to CHF pairs.
Moving Averages & Indicators
Candlestick Patterns (Daily / H4)
The daily Doji at 0.8980 is a perfect visual representation of the market’s uncertainty in this pair. Neither bulls nor bears could establish a clear directional close. The Pin Bar rejection at 0.9050 on the daily warns that resistance is real and sellers are defending that zone aggressively. Watch for a breakout above 0.9050 (targeting 0.9120) or a breakdown below 0.8920 (targeting 0.8860) as the two key scenarios to position around today’s NFP.
Trade Setup — Primary (USD Bull, NFP Beat Scenario)
LONG Setup — Post-NFP USD Strength Play
Entry Zone
0.8960–0.8985
Stop Loss
0.8900
Take Profit
0.9120
Risk : Reward
~2.2 : 1
Trade Setup — Alternative (CHF Safe-Haven Surge)
SHORT Setup — Geopolitical Escalation / CHF Squeeze
Entry Zone
0.9040–0.9060
Stop Loss
0.9110
Take Profit
0.8860
Risk : Reward
~3.0 : 1
Institutional Positioning — COT Snapshot
The Commitment of Traders (COT) report provides a weekly look at how institutional traders — large speculators and asset managers — are positioned across major currency futures. This data, combined with the price action discussed above, allows experienced traders to identify potential squeeze risks and sentiment extremes.
| Currency / Pair | Net Position | Direction | Change (Week) | Squeeze Risk | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USD Index (DXY) | -$19.6B net short | Short USD overall | Trimmed by $3.2B | Long Squeeze Risk ↑ | Shorts trimming = possible sentiment shift toward USD recovery |
| EUR/USD (Euro) | Net long (declining) | Longs unwinding | -36K contracts | Moderate | Bull bets being cut — validates EUR/USD bearish correction |
| GBP/USD (Pound) | Net short (~110K) | Increasing shorts | 3rd week increasing | HIGH Short Squeeze | Asset mgr gross shorts at 3.5-yr high — extreme positioning |
| USD/JPY (Yen) | Net long JPY | JPY bullish | AM trimmed -10K | Moderate | Yen bulls holding but trimming; USD/JPY downside pressure |
| USD/CHF (CHF) | Net short CHF 55.2K | Extreme CHF short | <500 from record | VERY HIGH Short Squeeze | Extremely crowded CHF short — violent reversal risk on shock events |
| USD/CAD (CAD) | Net long CAD (4.5-yr high) | CAD bullish bets | Increased | Moderate (if oil falls) | Heavy CAD longs could unwind if oil reverses; USD/CAD squeeze up |
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion & Bias Summary
NFP Day in a War Market — Trade the Tape, Respect the Risk
March 6, 2026 is not a day for casual trading. The February Non-Farm Payrolls report — with a consensus of +50K jobs — lands into one of the most elevated geopolitical risk environments since 2022. The US-Israel offensive against Iran, now in its seventh day, has pushed crude oil sharply higher, reshaped inflation expectations across every major economy, and driven the USD to seven-week highs above 99.10 on the DXY. The 15% global tariff from the Trump administration adds a structural USD tailwind that compounds the near-term bearish pressure on both EUR and GBP.
The core thesis for today is simple: the USD is the strongest currency in the room, and that position will be validated or challenged by what prints at 13:30 GMT. Sell rallies on EUR/USD and GBP/USD until the data changes the narrative. Use USD/CAD as a macro gauge — its balance between oil and USD strength tells you in real time which force is dominating. And treat USD/CHF with the utmost respect given the record-near CHF short positioning that could trigger a violent reversal at any moment. Always use stops, always size conservatively on days like today, and always wait for the post-NFP candle to confirm direction before pulling the trigger.
EUR/USD
Bearish
Target: 1.1500
GBP/USD
Sell Rallies
Target: 1.3200
USD/CAD
Cautious Bull
Watch oil first
USD/CHF
Range / Risky
Squeeze risk HIGH