Dollar Under Siege: EUR/USD Reclaims 0.5 Fib, GBP/USD Holds 0.382 Zone, USD/CAD & USD/CHF Retreat as Ceasefire Optimism Lifts Risk Appetite | Capital Street FX Forex Report — April 14, 2026
Dollar Under Siege: EUR/USD Reclaims the 0.5 Fibonacci, GBP/USD Stages Recovery, USD/CAD & USD/CHF Retreat as Ceasefire Hopes Lift Risk Appetite
EUR/USD at 1.1792 (+0.28%) pushes above the critical 0.5 Fibonacci level at 1.1747 as the ECB’s cautious stance diverges from Fed rate-cut pricing. GBP/USD at 1.3531 (+0.19%) recovers from the 0.382 Fib zone after the BoE’s unanimous March hold provides a hawkish floor. USD/CAD at 1.3762 (-0.22%) slides toward the key 0.5 Fib at 1.3728, with the BoC’s next rate decision due April 29 in focus. USD/CHF at 0.7806 (-0.42%) pressured by SNB intervention risk and Iran ceasefire optimism draining safe-haven USD demand. Capital Street FX Forex Research Desk · April 14, 2026
Iran Ceasefire Dialogue Saps Safe-Haven USD Demand — Rate Divergence Keeps EUR, GBP Bid
Tuesday’s forex session is dominated by two converging forces: a softening US dollar as Iran–US ceasefire dialogue restores risk appetite, and widening central-bank policy divergence that structurally favours EUR, GBP and CAD against the greenback. The Fed remains trapped between sticky CPI (March: 3.3% YoY, energy +10.9% MoM) and slowing growth, with rate-cut probability for December now a mere 30% on CME FedWatch. Meanwhile the ECB holds at 2.0%, the BoE is on hold at 3.75% with a unanimously hawkish March decision, the BoC sits at 2.25%, and the SNB remains at 0.00% — all with intervention postures that either support their currencies directly or cap USD recovery attempts.
- 💶 EUR/USD at 1.1792 — above the 0.5 Fibonacci at 1.1747: ECB holds at 2.0%, Lagarde signals data-dependency. Euro weakened in March on energy shock but has recovered sharply; MUFG sees 2 potential ECB hikes in 2026 if oil stays elevated, which structurally supports EUR
- 🇬🇧 GBP/USD at 1.3531 — recovering from 0.382 Fib zone: BoE voted unanimously to hold at 3.75% in March after the Middle East conflict pushed UK CPI to 3% from 2.1% forecast. Next MPC meeting April 30 — no cut expected. Goldman Sachs target: 1.38 by year-end
- 🍁 USD/CAD at 1.3762 — approaching the 0.5 Fibonacci at 1.3728: BoC held at 2.25% on March 18, explicitly “looking through” near-term oil inflation. Canadian CPI at 1.8% in February. Unemployment at 6.7%. Next BoC decision April 29 — hold widely expected
- 🇨🇭 USD/CHF at 0.7806 — testing 0.382 Fib zone: SNB held at 0.00% on March 19, flagged “increased willingness to intervene” to curb CHF strength. Swiss CPI accelerated to 0.3% in March. SNB FX intervention risk caps USD recovery attempts below 0.80
- 📊 Key event risk today: US PPI (Mar) at 08:30 ET — a hot print could reignite USD strength and pressure EUR/USD and GBP/USD. Fed Beige Book tomorrow and BoC decision April 29 are the next major catalysts
Today’s Best Forex Opportunities
Instrument Analysis
Technical Picture
EUR/USD is trading at 1.1792, having recovered convincingly from the March lows near 1.1411 (the 0 Fibonacci baseline). The pair has cleared the critical 0.5 Fibonacci level at 1.1747 on a sustained basis, with today’s session seeing a push into the 1.1792–1.1840 confluence zone where the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement sits at 1.1827. The descending resistance line visible on the chart from the January 2026 highs is being tested — a clean daily close above 1.1840 would represent a decisive trendline break and open the path toward the 0.786 Fibonacci at 1.1940 and ultimately the 1.0 Fibonacci at 1.2084.
The price action in Q1 2026 is defined by a sharp peak near 1.2084 at the start of the year, a steep correction to the 0 Fib at 1.1411 as the Middle East energy shock compressed EUR sentiment through March, and a sharp recovery rally that has now reclaimed the mid-range Fibonacci band. RSI on the daily is trending higher from the 40–45 oversold zone seen in late March, and is approaching the 55 level — suggesting momentum but not yet overbought. A pullback to the 0.5 Fib at 1.1747 on USD PPI data today would represent a high-probability buy-the-dip entry for bulls.
Fundamental Drivers
ECB Policy: The European Central Bank held its deposit rate at 2.00% at the March 19 meeting — the sixth consecutive hold. Policymakers raised the 2026 inflation forecast to 2.6% (driven by the energy shock) while cutting GDP growth to 0.9%. ECB President Lagarde has signalled a “forceful” response if energy inflation persists, and MUFG’s April research now prices two ECB hikes (April and June 2026) — a scenario that would sharply invert the EUR/USD rate differential narrative that previously favoured USD.
Eurozone Energy Shock: Headline inflation surged to 2.5% in March from 1.9% in February as energy inflation swung from -3.1% to +4.9% YoY. However, core CPI edged down to 2.3%, meaning this remains — for now — a first-round energy shock. EUR/USD’s resilience (holding above 1.15 despite a ~50% rise in oil) reflects markets pricing a more hawkish ECB response, partially offsetting the traditional “Europe loses from high oil” narrative.
Fed Divergence: The Fed holds at 3.50–3.75%, with rate-cut probability for December at only 30%. The potential replacement of Fed Chair Powell around May 2026 with a more dovish successor is a structural medium-term USD negative. EUR/USD medium-term forecasts: UBS targets 1.20 by mid-2026; Investing.com analysis sees 1.1950–1.2000 as the next target range on a break above 1.1840.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 Fib (Cycle High) | 1.20838 | Resistance | January 2026 cycle high — year-opening peak |
| 0.786 Fib | 1.19398 | Resistance | Key medium-term recovery target |
| 0.618 Fib | 1.18267 | Resistance | Immediate resistance — break needed to confirm trend |
| 0.5 Fib | 1.17473 | Current Pivot | Price above here is bullish — critical support level |
| 0.382 Fib | 1.16667 | Support | First downside target if PPI data disappoints |
| 0.236 Fib | 1.15606 | Support | Mid-range support band |
| 0 Fib (Cycle Low) | 1.14108 | Support | March 2026 cycle low — full retracement anchor |
The EUR/USD pattern is a classic corrective bounce within a larger downtrend that began at 1.2084. However, the fundamental context has shifted materially: the ECB’s evolving hawkish posture on energy inflation, combined with structural USD selling pressure (Fed cut cycle, potential Powell replacement), argues that this is not merely a dead-cat bounce but the beginning of a sustained recovery. The critical test is whether price can close above the 0.618 Fib at 1.1827 — a weekly close above that level on strong volume would signal a genuine trend reversal rather than a relief rally. The NBC Economics and Strategy April report targets EUR/USD back “towards the end of the year” contingent on Middle East de-escalation, with today’s price action already tracking the more optimistic scenario.
Technical Picture
GBP/USD is trading at 1.3531, having staged a meaningful recovery from the March lows around 1.3159 (near the 0 Fibonacci baseline at 1.3159). The Fibonacci grid is drawn on the Jan–Feb rally from 1.3159 to the cycle high around 1.4191, giving a range of approximately 103 pips per level. Current price sits just above the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement at 1.3431 — the pair is attempting to confirm a break above this level and target the 0.5 Fib at 1.3515 and 0.618 Fib at 1.3599.
The dashed descending resistance line on the chart, drawn from the February high near 1.3871, has been the defining barrier for GBP/USD throughout Q1 2026. The price has been making higher lows since the March trough, creating a constructive base. RSI has recovered from deeply oversold sub-30 levels in early March to around 48–50 today — neutral territory that supports a continued grind higher rather than a parabolic move. A break above the descending trendline (currently around 1.3570–1.3600) would be the definitive technical signal for bulls.
Fundamental Drivers
Bank of England — Unanimous March Hold: The BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to maintain Bank Rate at 3.75% at its March 19 meeting — a stark shift from the divided 5-4 vote in February. The unanimous decision reflects the committee’s collective assessment that the Middle East energy shock (which has pushed UK CPI to approximately 3% in Q2 2026 versus the previous forecast of 2.1%) makes easing inappropriate. The next MPC meeting is April 30, and no cut is expected given the energy inflation trajectory. Markets have repriced BoE cut expectations materially higher — from two cuts in 2026 priced pre-war to near-zero currently.
UK Inflation and Growth Crosscurrents: UK CPI remained at 3.0% in February (latest ONS data). Higher energy prices are expected to maintain CPI above 3% in Q2. BoE staff projections see Q2 CPI around 3% versus the pre-war 2.1% forecast. Private sector wage growth in the three months to January was 3.3% — below forecast — suggesting wage-price spiral risks are contained. UK GDP growth is expected at around 1% in 2026, below trend but avoiding recession.
Institutional Forecasts: Goldman Sachs maintains a 1.38 GBP/USD year-end 2026 target, with the BoE’s cautious easing strategy sustaining the UK–US rate differential advantage (+175 bps over Fed). JPMorgan sees a 1.30–1.38 range, with downside tail risk below 1.30 if UK economic recovery falters. RBC’s Currency Report Card revised EUR/GBP forecasts lower to 0.86 by end-2026, implying structural sterling outperformance versus EUR.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.618 Fib (Cycle Top area) | 1.43110+ | Resistance | Jan–Feb 2026 cycle highs zone |
| 1.0 Fib | 1.38710 | Resistance | Key medium-term recovery target; GS year-end target |
| 0.786 Fib | 1.37187 | Resistance | Significant resistance — would confirm trend shift if broken |
| 0.618 Fib | 1.35990 | Resistance | Immediate target — near descending trendline breakout zone |
| 0.5 Fib | 1.35150 | Current Pivot | Price breaking above this level today — key short-term pivot |
| 0.382 Fib | 1.34310 | Support | Immediate support — hold above bullish, break below bearish |
| 0.236 Fib | 1.33211 | Support | Secondary support band |
| 0 Fib (Cycle Low) | 1.31590 | Support | March 2026 cycle low |
GBP/USD’s technical structure is constructive but not yet bullish trend-confirmed. The pair is in a corrective recovery from the March lows, with the Fibonacci structure showing progressively higher resistance levels being tested. The key insight from the fundamental picture is that the BoE’s unanimous hold — driven by energy inflation — has created an unexpectedly hawkish backdrop for sterling, which was previously priced for aggressive easing. As long as Middle East tensions keep UK energy prices elevated, the BoE’s hands are tied, and GBP/USD should find support on dips. The 1.3500–1.3515 zone (0.5 Fib) is the line in the sand: bulls need a sustained hold here to maintain the recovery narrative.
Technical Picture
USD/CAD is trading at 1.3762, having broken below the 0.382 Fibonacci level at 1.3785 and now approaching the 0.5 Fibonacci at 1.3728. The Fibonacci grid is drawn from the recent cycle low at 1.3486 to the cycle high at 1.3970, spanning approximately 484 pips. The pair reached the top of the range near 1.39 in late March/early April — tracking the peak of Middle East geopolitical risk and peak USD safe-haven demand — and has been consistently declining since.
The chart shows a well-defined ascending channel from the February lows, but the upper bound of that channel has now been decisively broken and price is reversing toward the lower support structure. The dashed descending resistance line from the high is now acting as overhead resistance around 1.3850. The RSI is moving from overbought back toward neutral, confirming the corrective momentum. The 0.5 Fib at 1.3728 is the next significant support level — a break below that zone would open up 1.3670 (0.618 Fib) and ultimately 1.3590 (0.786 Fib) in a deeper USD correction scenario.
Fundamental Drivers
Bank of Canada — Hold at 2.25%, April 29 Decision Looms: The BoC held its overnight rate at 2.25% on March 18, explicitly stating it will “look through” near-term oil-driven inflation. Governor Macklem acknowledged that Canadian employment reversed Q4 2025 gains in January–February 2026, with the unemployment rate rising to 6.7% in February. CPI eased to 1.8% in February — below the 2% target — giving the BoC theoretical room to cut, but energy price uncertainty and USMCA trade policy risks are restraining action. The April 29 MPR and rate decision will be critical: a hold with a softer growth outlook could renew CAD selling pressure, while any hawkish signal on inflation would support CAD.
Oil Price Dynamics — The Two-Way CAD Driver: Canada’s unique positioning as both a major oil exporter and a US trade-dependent economy creates opposing forces for USD/CAD. Elevated WTI crude prices (currently near $97) directly support CAD revenues and current account dynamics. However, strong US economic performance and elevated US yields simultaneously underpin USD. The MTFX 5-bank Canadian dollar forecast for April 2026 sees USD/CAD trading near 1.37–1.40 range-bound, with gradual CAD appreciation expected into H2 2026 as rate differentials narrow and commodity prices stabilize.
USMCA Trade Risk: The Canada–US–Mexico Agreement review is described by Desjardins as “the defining issue of 2026.” BMO economists flag it as a “relative pessimist” risk, noting the deal could face annual reviews. USD/CAD breaking out of its 1.37–1.39 range requires either a more pronounced USD rally (unlikely near-term) or a negative USMCA outcome. Speculative CAD positioning (COT data) shows large speculators increased net-long CAD futures to a 4.5-year high — a contrarian bearish signal for CAD at the margin.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 Fib (Cycle High) | 1.39700 | Resistance | March/April cycle top — peak USD safe-haven/oil risk premium |
| 0.236 Fib | 1.38567 | Resistance | Now overhead resistance after breakdown; descending trendline |
| 0.382 Fib | 1.37851 | Resistance | Broken support now resistance — price just below here |
| 0.5 Fib | 1.37279 | Current Support | Immediate support — key level for bulls to defend |
| 0.618 Fib | 1.36708 | Support | Secondary support — CAD bull target |
| 0.786 Fib | 1.35894 | Support | Significant support zone — extended CAD rally target |
| 1 Fib (Cycle Low) | 1.34858 | Support | February cycle low — full retracement anchor |
USD/CAD is in a corrective decline from the March/April peaks, driven by easing geopolitical risk premium and a fundamentally supportive oil price environment for CAD. The 0.5 Fibonacci at 1.3728 is the critical decision zone: if price holds here ahead of the April 29 BoC meeting, a consolidation range of 1.3730–1.3860 is likely. If the BoC surprises with a cut or a dovish statement, USD/CAD could recover sharply. The structural case for lower USD/CAD into H2 2026 (narrowing rate differentials, stabilising commodity prices) supports selling rallies toward the 0.382 Fib rather than chasing the downside at current levels.
Technical Picture
USD/CHF is trading at 0.7806, having retreated from the 0.382 Fibonacci resistance at 0.7871 and now tracking toward the 0.5 Fibonacci at 0.7818. The Fibonacci grid is drawn from the January 2026 cycle low at 0.7594 to the March/April recovery high at 0.8043, covering approximately 449 pips. Price broke above the 0.382 Fib level during the peak of the Middle East risk premium in late March/early April, briefly testing the area just below 0.80 before the Iran ceasefire dialogue emerged and reversed the safe-haven USD trade.
The chart shows an ascending channel structure that has now peaked, with price clearly rolling over from the 0.236 Fib region near 0.7937 and breaking below the 50-day ascending trendline. The 0.5 Fib at 0.7818 is the immediate target and a likely zone for a pause — this level aligns with the mid-March trading range. Below that, the 0.618 Fib at 0.7766 and 0.786 Fib at 0.7690 represent progressively deeper support levels. For USD/CHF to resume its recovery, bulls need to reclaim 0.7871 on a daily close — currently looking unlikely without a major geopolitical re-escalation or hot US data.
Fundamental Drivers
SNB — Zero Rates, FX Intervention as Primary Tool: The Swiss National Bank kept its policy rate at 0.00% at the March 19, 2026 meeting — the lowest among all major central banks globally. The Governing Board made a significant communication shift: it explicitly stated that its “willingness to intervene in the foreign exchange market has increased,” citing the Middle East conflict and the risk of “rapid and excessive appreciation of the Swiss franc.” SNB Chair Schlegel has repeated this language multiple times, reinforcing the message. Reuters polling shows all but one of 29 forecasters expect the SNB to hold rates at 0% through 2026, with FX intervention — not negative rates — as the primary defence mechanism.
Swiss Inflation Uptick Reduces Negative Rate Risk: Swiss CPI rose to 0.3% YoY in March (from 0.1% in February), the highest in a year, driven by energy prices. While still extremely subdued by global standards, the acceleration is welcomed by the SNB as it reduces the risk of deflation and provides cover for holding at 0.00%. Rabobank notes this will “relieve” the SNB and reduces the probability of a return to negative rates — a key structural support for the franc. ECB rate hike expectations (MUFG sees two in 2026) have helped lift EUR/CHF off recent lows, creating slight relief for USD/CHF, but this effect is partial and fragile.
Safe-Haven Dynamics: The Swiss franc has gained approximately 3.5% against the USD year-to-date, following a 12.7% gain in 2025. Switzerland’s persistent current-account surplus (consistently above 5% of GDP), low inflation, and safe-haven status structurally support CHF demand. The SNB’s FX intervention threat creates a two-sided market: CHF strength is capped by SNB action risk, while USD strength is capped by structural USD weakness. Rabobank forecasts CHF to “remain firm” with renewed EUR/CHF dips likely in Q2 2026.
| Level | Price | Type | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 Fib (Cycle High) | 0.80432 | Resistance | March/April peak — peak safe-haven USD demand |
| 0.236 Fib | 0.79370 | Resistance | Key overhead resistance; SNB intervention watch zone |
| 0.382 Fib | 0.78710 | Resistance | Broken support now resistance — today’s high was here |
| 0.5 Fib | 0.78184 | Current Support | Immediate support — price approaching this level |
| 0.618 Fib | 0.76654 | Support | Major support — SNB likely to become very active near here |
| 0.786 Fib | 0.76899 | Support | Deep support zone |
| 1 Fib (Cycle Low) | 0.75937 | Support | January 2026 cycle low — structural anchor |
USD/CHF’s trading action today is a textbook expression of the ceasefire-optimism trade: as Iran dialogue removes the most acute geopolitical risk premium from the USD, the safe-haven bid unwinds and USD/CHF falls. The structural picture favours continued CHF strength: zero SNB rates, FX intervention threat, current-account surplus, and a robust safe-haven demand base. The critical observation is that the SNB will likely become increasingly active on the CHF buying side below 0.78, limiting downside in USD/CHF to a degree. For traders, the optimal position is to sell USD/CHF on rallies toward the 0.382 Fib at 0.7871, with an eye on SNB verbal intervention as a risk management signal. The RBC Currency Report Card’s end-2026 EUR/CHF target of 0.93 (from 0.94 previous) implies continued CHF structural strength.
Forex Economic Calendar — April 14–30, 2026
| Date / Time (ET) | Event | Impact | Previous | Forecast | Actual | Forex Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 14 · 08:30 | US PPI (March) | HIGH | +3.4% YoY | ~3.5%e | TODAY | EUR/USD, GBP/USD — hot print = USD strength; miss = EUR/GBP rally |
| Apr 15 | Fed Beige Book | MED | — | — | TOMORROW | All USD pairs — regional economic health; signals for Fed June meeting |
| Apr 16 · 08:30 | US Initial Jobless Claims | MED | — | ~220Ke | THURSDAY | USD pairs — labour market health critical for Fed rate-cut timing |
| Apr 17 | UK Retail Sales (March) | MED | — | — | FRIDAY | GBP/USD — key consumer health indicator amid energy cost pressure |
| Apr 29 · 10:00 | Bank of Canada Rate Decision + MPR | HIGH | 2.25% | Hold (2.25%) | APR 29 | USD/CAD — hold expected but growth/inflation balance in MPR will drive CAD |
| Apr 29 | Federal Reserve Rate Decision | HIGH | 3.50–3.75% | Hold expected | APR 29 | All USD pairs — 0% probability of cut; watch Powell press conference for June signals |
| Apr 30 · London | Bank of England Rate Decision | HIGH | 3.75% | Hold (3.75%) | APR 30 | GBP/USD — unanimous March hold set high bar; watch vote split and energy inflation language |
| Apr 30 | Eurozone GDP Flash (Q1 2026) | HIGH | 0.2% QoQ | ~0.1–0.2%e | APR 30 | EUR/USD — weak print would pressure EUR; growth seen 0.9% YoY for 2026 |
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