Notícias de mercado & insights
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A América Latina (LATAM) registrou mais de 730 bilhões de dólares em volume de criptomoedas em 2025, um aumento de 60% em relação ao ano anterior que tornou a região responsável por cerca de 10% da atividade global de criptomoedas.
Em 2026, os atores institucionais estão começando a levar a região a sério, a regulamentação está se cristalizando e os fatores estruturais de 2025 não mostram sinais de enfraquecimento. Mas a região não é uma história única, e 2026 testará se o momento atual se baseia em fundamentos sólidos ou em otimismo especulativo.
Fatos rápidos
- Os usuários ativos mensais de criptomoedas da LATAM cresceram 18% em relação ao ano anterior (YoY), três vezes mais rápido do que os EUA.
- A Argentina atingiu 12% de penetração mensal de usuários ativos, representando mais de um quarto da atividade criptográfica da região.
- Mais de 90% dos fluxos de criptomoedas brasileiros agora estão relacionados a stablecoins.
- Três países da América Latina estão no top 20 global: Brasil (5º), Venezuela (18º), Argentina (20º).
- Os downloads de aplicativos criptográficos do Perú cresceram 50% em 2025, com 2,9 milhões de downloads.

Da ferramenta de sobrevivência à infraestrutura financeira
A América Latina não adotou a criptomoeda por causa da especulação. Ela o adotou porque os sistemas financeiros tradicionais repetidamente falharam com pessoas comuns. Nos últimos 15 anos, a inflação média anual nas cinco maiores economias da região foi de 13%, em comparação com apenas 2,3% nos EUA no mesmo período.
Na Venezuela, chegou a 65.000% em um único ano. Na Argentina, ultrapassou 220% em 2024. Para milhões de pessoas, manter as economias em moeda local foi um lento ato de autodestruição. As stablecoins se tornaram a resposta natural. Os ativos digitais atrelados ao dólar americano ofereciam uma reserva confiável de valor, transferibilidade sem fronteiras e acesso sem uma conta bancária.
Ao contrário do Ocidente, onde a criptografia é vista mais como um instrumento especulativo, na América Latina ela se tornou uma ferramenta financeira necessária. No entanto, os fatores de adoção não são totalmente uniformes em toda a região. Brasil e México são histórias institucionais, impulsionadas pela participação regulada no mercado e por atores financeiros estabelecidos.
A Argentina e a Venezuela continuam sendo jogadoras de reserva de valor, com a criptografia servindo como uma proteção direta contra o colapso fiduciário. E o Perú e a Colômbia são mercados mais lucrativos, onde a criptografia oferece retornos que as contas de poupança tradicionais não conseguem igualar.

Com que rapidez a LATAM está adotando a criptografia?
O volume de criptomoedas em cadeia da LATAM aumentou 60% em relação ao ano anterior em 2025. A região registrou quase 1,5 trilhão de dólares em volume cumulativo desde meados de 2022, atingindo um recorde de 87,7 bilhões de dólares em um único mês em dezembro de 2024.
Os usuários ativos mensais de criptomoedas em toda a América Latina também cresceram 18% em 2025, três vezes mais rápido do que nos EUA.
As Stablecoins são o principal veículo que impulsiona essa adoção. Dos $730 bilhões recebidos em 2025, $324 bilhões passaram por transações de stablecoin, um aumento de 89% em relação ao ano anterior. No Brasil, mais de 90% de todos os fluxos de criptomoedas estão relacionados a stablecoins e, na Argentina, as stablecoins respondem por mais de 60% da atividade.
Olhando para o futuro, prevê-se que o mercado de criptomoedas da América Latina alcance US$442,6 bilhões até 2033, crescendo a uma taxa anual composta de 10,93% a partir de 2025, de acordo com o IMARC Group.
Para os traders, a velocidade de adoção importa menos como manchete do que o que a impulsiona: uma região de 650 milhões de pessoas construindo infraestrutura financeira paralela em tempo real, com stablecoins como base.
A virada institucional
Durante a maior parte da história da criptografia da LATAM, a adoção foi de baixo para cima. Usuários de varejo sem conta bancária ou sem conta bancária impulsionaram volumes por meio de bolsas locais. Essa imagem agora está mudando no topo do mercado.
Em fevereiro de 2026, o Crypto Finance Group, parte da principal operadora global de câmbio Deutsche Börse Group, anunciou sua expansão na América Latina, visando bancos, gestores de ativos e intermediários financeiros que buscam infraestrutura de custódia e negociação de nível institucional.
Bancos e fintechs tradicionais estão seguindo o exemplo. O Nubank agora premia os clientes por possuírem USDC. A bolsa B3 do Brasil aprovou os primeiros ETFs XRP e SOL à vista do mundo, à frente dos EUA, em 2025. As bolsas centralizadas, incluindo Mercado Bitcoin, NovaDAX e Binance, listaram coletivamente mais de 200 novos pares de negociação denominados em BRL desde o início de 2024.
Em março de 2025, a fintech brasileira Meliuz se tornou a primeira empresa de capital aberto no país a lançar uma estratégia de acumulação de Bitcoin, agora detendo 320 BTC.
“A adoção de criptomoedas na América Latina já está em escala global. O que o mercado precisa agora é de governança de nível institucional, e é exatamente por isso que estamos aqui”, — Stijn Vander Straeten, CEO do Crypto Finance Group
Caso de uso de remessa criptográfica
A América Latina recebe centenas de bilhões de dólares anualmente de trabalhadores no exterior, tornando as remessas um dos casos de uso de criptomoedas mais concretos e mensuráveis da região. Os serviços de transferência tradicionais cobram em média 6,2% por transação. Em uma transferência de USD 300, são aproximadamente USD 20 em taxas.
A infraestrutura baseada em blockchain oferece, de forma mais ampla, reduções drásticas de taxas. O Bitcoin traz custos para cerca de USD 3,12 por USD 100 transferidos. Embora alternativas mais baratas, como a infraestrutura de camada 2 de XRP ou Ethereum, possam reduzir isso para menos de USD 0,01.
Para um trabalhador migrante que envia USD 1.500 para casa no Perú, mudar de um banco antigo economiza mais do que o salário semanal peruano médio apenas em taxas.
Ambiente regulatório de criptomoedas da LATAM
A variável que mais determinará se a LATAM está à altura de seu potencial de 2026 é a regulação de criptomoedas. E aqui, a imagem é genuinamente mista.
O Brasil lidera a região com sua Lei de Ativos Virtuais, que abrange segregação de ativos, licenciamento VASP, requisitos de AML/KYC e padrões de capital. Também implementou a Regra de Viagem para transferências domésticas do VASP, que entrou em vigor em fevereiro de 2026. No entanto, algumas propostas mais controversas, incluindo um limite de USD 100.000 para transações transfronteiriças de stablecoin e a proibição de transferências de carteira de autocustódia, permanecem sob consulta ativa.
A Lei Fintech de 2018 do México continua sendo um dos primeiros reconhecimentos formais de ativos virtuais do mundo. A Lei Fintech de 2023 do Chile estabeleceu licenças para bolsas, carteiras e emissores de stablecoin, reconhecendo formalmente os ativos digitais como “dinheiro digital”.
A Bolívia reverteu uma proibição de criptomoedas de uma década em junho de 2024 ao autorizar transações regulamentadas de ativos digitais. A Argentina introduziu o registro cambial obrigatório em 2025. E El Salvador continua expandindo as iniciativas econômicas tokenizadas, apesar de remover o status de moeda legal do Bitcoin.
Dez países da região agora têm algum tipo de estrutura formal de criptografia. Mas para os comerciantes, a divergência regulatória continua sendo um risco real e, como o Brasil recebe quase um terço de todo o volume de criptomoedas da América Latina, qualquer reversão significativa de política pode ter consequências descomunais.

O que os traders devem observar
O impulso institucional do Brasil é a tendência estrutural mais significativa. Com um volume de 318,8 bilhões de dólares em cadeia em 2025, o Brasil é efetivamente o mercado da América Latina.
O resultado da consulta da stablecoin no Brasil pode ter uma grande influência. Uma restrição às stablecoins estrangeiras em pagamentos domésticos impactaria diretamente a classe de ativos mais negociada no mercado dominante da região.
A Argentina é o jogo da volatilidade. A penetração mensal de usuários ativos de 12% e 5,4 milhões de downloads de aplicativos criptográficos em 2025 sinalizam um engajamento profundo e crescente do varejo.
A Colômbia é um mercado de alerta precoce a ser observado. A depreciação de 5,3% do peso em 2025 e o aprofundamento da crise fiscal estão impulsionando as entradas de stablecoin em um padrão que reflete a trajetória da Argentina em anos anteriores. Se a situação macro da Colômbia se deteriorar ainda mais, a adoção de criptomoedas poderá acelerar.
Também existe um risco de concentração cambial em jogo. A bolsa de criptomoedas Binance é a principal bolsa para mais de 50% dos usuários de criptomoedas da América Latina. Se a bolsa enfrentar qualquer ação regulatória, interrupção operacional ou choque competitivo, ela poderá ter um impacto enorme no mercado.
Conclusão
O mercado de criptomoedas da América Latina entrou em uma nova fase. Os fatores estruturais que causaram a demanda inicial de criptomoedas na região não desapareceram: inflação, remessas, exclusão financeira e instabilidade cambial ainda estão em jogo.
O que mudou foi a camada que está sendo construída sobre eles. Infraestrutura institucional, estruturas regulatórias, adoção de tesouraria corporativa e capital cambial global fluindo para uma região que era, até recentemente, amplamente independente.
O crescimento de volume de quase -250% do Brasil em 2025 e sua posição de receber quase um terço de todas as criptomoedas da América Latina são os principais desenvolvimentos do mercado. Sua trajetória regulatória, decisões de política de stablecoin e pipeline de ETF definirão efetivamente o tom para a região em 2026.
Para os traders, os principais números de crescimento são reais, assim como os riscos de concentração, as incertezas regulatórias e as divergências em nível de país que estão abaixo deles.


Where’s the Federal Reserve at? Slowing Growth and Potential Rate Cuts: Recent economic data suggests a slowdown in growth, contrary to earlier expectations of reaccelerating growth and inflation. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's statements and recent economic indicators point towards the possibility of lower policy rates in the near future.
Key indicators, such as the softening in job markets and overall economic activity, indicate that growth is decelerating rather than accelerating. Core inflation remains above the Fed's target but is showing signs of a gradual decline, with core CPI at 0.29% month-over-month (MoM) in April. This trend could build the Fed's confidence that inflation is on a downward trajectory, potentially leading to rate cuts starting in July.
These data trends have filtered into in the market itself. The divergence between the S&P and US 2-year has been come very apparent as yields unwind from their hawkish bets that ramped up on Q1 data. That spread is becoming an interesting trade – it could close as fast as it has opened if data misses.
On the data – what is core to the Fed’s view? Inflation Trends: Core inflation remains elevated but shows signs of slowing. The April core CPI increase of 0.29% MoM aligns with the Fed's expectations of gradual inflation decline.
The slow but steady decrease in shelter prices, particularly the owner’s equivalent rent (OER), is a positive sign. However, the "supercore" non-shelter services sector's inflation is unlikely to slow significantly without a loosening of the labour market and that remains a headwind. That brings us to the next question what is the official views of the Fed?
Federal Reserve Outlook: The recent Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes and statements from Fed officials suggest it still holds a cautious approach. While there is no major shift towards a hawkish stance, the rhetoric indicates a readiness to cut rates if inflation data supports a premise it’s on a path to a more sustainable level. Yet the view from members is rather mixed, illustrated by the mixed views from members over the past week.
Key Statements Vice Chair Philip Jefferson: Jefferson noted that while April's data is encouraging, it is too early to determine if the slowdown in inflation is sustainable. He emphasized the current restrictive monetary policy and refrained from predicting when rate cuts might begin, stressing the importance of assessing incoming economic data and the balance of risks. Vice Chair of Supervision Michael Barr: Barr expressed disappointment with Q1 inflation readings, which did not increase his confidence in easing monetary policy.
He reinforced the message that rate cuts are on hold until there's clear evidence that inflation will return to the 2% target. Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester: Mester anticipates a gradual decline in inflation this year but acknowledges that it will be slower than expected. She no longer expects three rate cuts this year and mentioned that the Fed is prepared to hold rates steady or raise them if inflation does not improve as anticipated.
San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly: Daly sees no need for rate hikes but also lacks confidence that inflation is decreasing towards 2%. She sees no urgency to cut rates, echoing the broader sentiment of caution among Fed officials. The conclusion from all this is that the Fed is still giving itself time.
It’s of the view that the restrictive policy will need more time to work, suggesting a prolonged period of higher interest rates to combat inflation effectively and despite the movements in the bond market and USD. Traders in the fed fund futures are still trading a full 50 basis points higher as of now compared to their bets at the March meeting. (Black v Blue line) Other data that matters: GDP and Consumer Spending: Despite strong GDP growth in the latter half of 2023, real GDP growth slowed significantly to 1.6% annualized in Q1 2024. Final private domestic demand was sustained primarily by consumer services spending, even as real goods spending declined.
The weakening consumer spending on goods is beginning to spill over into the services sector, indicating broader consumer weakness. Manufacturing and Investment: Data on manufacturing and business investment remains weak. Manufacturing production has stagnated, and orders for durable goods have not shown significant improvement.
Residential fixed investment is also slowing, with housing starts and building permits both declining in April. Housing Market: Existing home sales data, to be released soon, is expected to show a modest rebound from the previous month. However, ongoing weakness in the housing market, influenced by higher mortgage rates, remains a concern.
Hot Copper – Too hot? Copper has experienced significant price movements, with several key factors contributing to the recent trends in copper prices, spreads, and inventory levels. The following points provide an in-depth analysis of the forces at play: Tighter Physical Copper Market: Last week's record highs in COMEX and SHFE copper prices, alongside the COMEX-LME copper spreads indicate a very tight physical copper market.
This saw the LME copper price smash a new record all-time high (above US$11,000 a tonne). The dislocation in copper price benchmarks, such as the COMEX-LME spread, typically leads to adjustments in physical flows. However, current conditions are proving challenging, with generally low copper inventories and logistical issues.
For example, traders in China are facing tight shipping schedules, making it difficult to move copper to the US. Suggesting the price will hold in the interim De-commoditisation of Commodities: Deliverable Metal Scarcity: The elevated COMEX copper prices relative to other benchmarks can be partly attributed to the lack of deliverable metal. Only 17% of the metal in LME warehouses originates from countries with COMEX-approved brands.
This scarcity of deliverable inventory means that most of the available copper cannot be used to satisfy COMEX contracts, driving up the COMEX copper premium. RIO, BHP and the like all benefit from this. Influence of Financial Flows: Naturally this kind of move brings highten investor and trader interest.
COMEX copper futures are experiencing all-time highs in long positioning and record open interest in copper options. This surge in financial flows has pushed COMEX copper prices higher compared to other benchmarks and has been more resistant to reversal. What next?
The tight inventory situation is likely to persist, especially if logistical challenges and shipping delays continue. This will maintain upward pressure on prices and could lead to further dislocations between different copper price benchmarks. Efforts to alleviate bottlenecks will be crucial in normalizing price spreads and stabilizing the market.
Any improvement in shipping schedules or inventory replenishment could ease some of the current tensions, but we do not hold our breathe for this to occur any time soon. Conclusion The recent record highs in copper prices and spreads underscore a complex interplay of tight physical markets, and significant financial flows. Traders should closely monitor these dynamics and adapt their positions to capitalise on potential switches and further squeezes.
But in the main Dr. Copper is hot and likely to remain so until supply catches up.


What is going on with Taiwan? Taiwan is back in the news after US speaker of the house Nancy Pelosi visited the country causing a fiery reaction from the mainland of China. Historical background In order to understand the causes of the China/Taiwan tension, some historical perspective is needed.
The current tension stems from the Chinese civil war 1927 – 1949 where Mao Zedong’s Communist army and Chiang Kai- Shek’s Republic of China army fought in a series of intermittent battles to secure control of mainland China. As the Communist army began to gain ascendancy, Chiang Kai–Shek and the Republic of China movement was forced into exile to Taiwan. Since this exile and lasting until today, a long-standing military and political standoff has been in place between the two countries with each claiming to be the rightful controller of China.
In recent years, China has attempted to expand its influence and places such as Hong Kong have seen Beijing challenge its sovereignty the pressure has been building on Taiwan. At times of increased tension, China has conducted military exercises in the Taiwan Strait to act as a ‘warning’ to Taiwan and the West that it may be treading too close to China’s political interests. Current Day Events Nancy Pelosi became the first US speaker of the House to visit Taiwan in more than 25 years.
The visit by Pelosi, whilst not necessarily threatening is an act that supports the legitimacy of Taiwan as a democratic, sovereign government. Pelosi challenged the essence of China’s communist regime and stated, “Today the world faces a choice between democracy and autocracy.” However, the speaker did not go as far as to offer any specific military support to protect against an aggressive response from the CCP.. Any act of economic or military support has the potential to draw an aggressive response from the CCP.
Why does this matter? Traders and investors do not have to look too far to see what can happen to the market if geopolitical conflict breaks out. It is still only a few months on since the Russia and Ukraine conflict broke out.
After the initial invasions, commodity prices soared as sanctions were placed on Russia and supply chains were placed under pressure. The market is still trying to adjust to these consequences today. In addition, the Ruble took a huge hit and Moscow Exchange had to be closed as countries placed sanctions on Russia and its monetary system.
If China was to invade Taiwan it is reasonable to expect economic sanctions will follow. With China being such a huge player in the global supply chain, it may have a larger effect on commodity prices. The Ukraine conflict showed the world how fragile global supply chains can be when conflict strikes.
Specifically, Gas, Grain, Oil rocketed in price. Regarding Taiwan and China, a large portion of the world semi- conductors are produced in Taiwan which means that there could be disastrous consequences that may ensure should war breakout. A more detailed discussion on the impact that a shortage of semiconductors may have can be found below. https://www.gomarkets.com/au/articles/economic-updates/semi-conductor-supply-crunch/ Similarly, the Yuan may take a hit with any kind of escalation in conflict.
Therefore, traders should be aware of the conflict and ongoing tensions as trading opportunities may eventuate. The USDCNH can be traded on Go Markets platforms.


The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, legally S.W.I.F.T. SC, is a Belgian cooperative society providing services related to the execution of financial transactions and payments between banks worldwide. Its principal function is to serve as the main messaging network through which international payments are initiated.
It also sells software and services to financial institutions, mostly for use on its proprietary "SWIFTNet". Its important to understand that money is not moved through the SWIFT system but most importantly is the data attributed to the money that is moved through this medium. In other words, without SWIFT the institutions wouldn’t know who and for what reason is a transaction is being made.
For example; if you are sending money from country to country, SWIFT would inform the recipient bank that is getting the money, to expect a certain sum, from a certain bank. So its an extremely important step that will be taken away from Russia. If you do not have that information flow; you simply cannot do any international transactions.
SWIFT welcomes the public launch of the New Payments Platform (NPP) in Australia, which is set to revolutionise the way payments are made domestically. SWIFT has helped to design, build, test and deliver the NPP and will play a key role in operating the infrastructure for the NPP. The NPP’s paradigm-shifting financial architecture has been designed and constructed to fundamentally improve how consumers, businesses and governments transact with one another.
The key features of the NPP include: 24/7 instant payments and real-time line-by-line settlement via the Reserve Bank of Australia’s Fast Settlement Service PayID, the new and easy way to link a financial account with an easy-to-remember identifier such as a mobile phone number, email address or ABN for businesses Open access platform that truly empowers innovation through competition Overlay services framework that will provide new value services to Australian consumers, businesses and government Russia’s SWIFT Sanction Since the invasion of Russia, many countries have joined forces in order to impose heavy sanctions on Russia. Some of these actions are to limit, deter and coerce Russia or Vladimir Putin into changing his strong stance in the war against Ukraine. These sanctions would be felt throughout all classes of Russia’s community and its corporate arm.
One popular sanction has been to remove Russia from the SWIFT messaging system, with the intention to stop any Russian companies from doing international business, which in turn would hurt Russia’s economy and potentially turn Russian loyalists against Mr. Putin and force him into an unlikely reversal of the war. Although this is somewhat looked upon as a key destabilizing strategy by the West, there are some that feel the move is mostly symbolic.
EU bars 7 Russian banks from SWIFT, but spares those in Energy (Reuters). The European Union said on Wednesday (2 nd march) it was excluding seven Russian banks from the SWIFT messaging system, but stopped short of including those handling energy payments, in the latest sanctions imposed on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. VTB Bank PJSC and Bank Rossiya are among the banks that face a ban from the messaging system.
The other institutions included on the EU list are Bank Otkritie, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank PJSC, Sovcombank PJSC and VEB.RF, said the officials, who asked not to be identified because the decision was private. European Union ambassadors agreed to spared the nation’s biggest lender Sberbank PJSC and a bank part-owned by Russian gas giant Gazprom PJSC. Would it work: Professor of Financial Economics at the University of Loughborough University, Alistair Milne, explains why he is sceptical of the sanction. “Russia’s exclusion from the international payments messaging system Swift, is presented as a powerful means of undermining its economy.
But for a payment’s expert such as myself, this is something of a myth.” He continues, “The reality, however, is that limiting access to Swift is less practically effective than most media coverage supposes. It is an important symbol of global repudiation of Russia’s exercise of military force, but not much more. It is other measures, such as blocking the central bank of the Russian Federation from transacting internationally, which is undermining confidence in the Rouble.” “There is no fundamental problem with transferring funds using some other secure messaging systems.
Russian banks might, for example, instead arrange payments using the SPFS system, which was established after the 2014 invasion of Crimea by the Russian central bank. This is currently used by a handful of international banks in Germany and Switzerland linked to Russian banks.” “Or they could use the CIPS network, which was created by the People’s Bank of China for the purpose of cross-border payments with indirect participants in many countries. They could even use WhatsApp to instruct the necessary transactions.” Leaving room for negotiation?
The EU has avoided the sanctioning of all Russia banks, specially those that use SWIFT in the energy industry. This might be crucial as they seem to be trying to limit Russia, but at the same time keep the door ajar to be able to negotitate energy deals, which, the West are hugely dependednt on. Another thing to note is payments for Russian energy exports, for example to Gazprom, are even less Swift-dependent.
When operators buy oil or gas from Gazprom, they make payments in either euro or US dollars into bank accounts held by the Russian energy company. So if the intention of sanctions is to block payments for Russian gas, the tool is not Swift; it is sanctions on Gazprom and its banking facilities. Perhaps this could be something that is visited in the future.
The absence of Sberbank PJSC and Gazprombank shows the continuing level of concern over the consequences for Europe from a financial isolation of Russia spilling over into the global economy, especially when it comes to energy supplies. The bloc is also worried Russia could retaliate by cutting deliveries. Sources: Reuters, Wikipedia, Loughborugh University, Bloomberg, swift.com


Walmart tops expectations for Q2 – the stock is up Walmart Inc. (WMT) announced its Q2 financial results before the market open on Wall Street on Tuesday. World’s largest supermarket chain reported results that exceeded analyst expectations, sending the stock price higher. The company reported revenue of $152.859 billion (up by 8.4% year-over-year) vs. $150.994 billion expected.
Earnings per share reported at $1.77 per share for the quarter vs. $1.62 per share estimate. Doug McMillon, President and CEO of Walmart commented on the latest results: ''We’re pleased to see more customers choosing Walmart during this inflationary period, and we’re working hard to support them as they prioritize their spending. The actions we’ve taken to improve inventory levels in the U.S., along with a heavier mix of sales in grocery put pressure on profit margin for Q2 and our outlook for the year.
We made good progress throughout the quarter operationally to improve costs in our supply chain, and that work is ongoing. We continue to build on our strategy to expand our digital businesses, including the continued strength we see in our international markets.'' Walmart Inc. (WMT) chart The stock was up by over 6% on Tuesday, trading at $140.233 a share. Here is how the stock has performed in the past year: 1 Month +8.62% 3 Month +7.14% Year-to-date -2.74% 1 Year -6.62% Walmart price targets Deutsche Bank $142 Raymond James $140 BMO Capital $160 Cowen & Co. $150 Morgan Stanley $145 UBS $152 Credit Suisse $133 Wells Fargo $130 Walmart is the 14 th largest company in the world with a market cap of $383.98 billion.
You can trade Walmart Inc. (WMT) and many other stocks from the NYSE, NASDAQ, HKEX and the ASX with GO Markets as a Share CFD. Sources: Walmart Inc., TradingView, MetaTrader 5, Benzinga, CompaniesMarketCap


The USDJPY has been in an extremely strong upward trend since September 2021. This pair's recent price action has also been charactarised by relatively weak retracements as it has trended higher. Inflationary pressures have acted as a strong catalyst for the USD against most other currencies further aided by the Federal Reserve taking a strong stance against inflation with a series of aggressive interest rate hikes.
At the same time, the JPY has remained weak as the Central Bank of Japan has refused to intervene and shift from its dovish stance. The most recent retracement shows the potential for a good risk/reward Long trade. On the chart, it can be seen that the price has pulled back to the 23.60% Fibonacci level, which is at 132/133JPY.
This area also doubles as a support zone with the prior resistance level becoming a level of support which is another sign that the trend may continue. On the weekly chart, the characteristics of the candlesticks near the support zone also support the premise that the price may bounce. The candles have long wicks touching the support area indicating that the buyers are soaking up the supply.
They have also closed near their opening price again showing how buyers are soaking up the supply. The 4-hour chart shows a consolidation of the price forming a triangle, with the potential to break out to the upside. This may provide an alternative entry signal for the same overall strategy.
An important aspect to remember when trading this strategy is to ensure that price occurs with relatively high volume. Large volume indicates that buyers are regaining control over the price, and that sellers have become exhausted. Potential risks There are some risks with this trade.
Firstly, the pair is already quite overextended with the price at multi-decade highs. In addition, with US inflation fears potentially easing and interest rate hikes priced in already, the current price may be near its peak.


USDJPY ready to bounce or retrace further. The USDJPY has been recently provided great buying opportunities for traders. However, in recent days it has posted its largest drop since beginning the current upward at the beginning of January 2021.
The question remains, is this just a standard retracement or is it a symbol of a much bigger reversal. In the last few months, the USD has risen sharply as the market has responded to inflation fears and geopolitical events. With inflation levels at record levels across much of the developed world many Central Banks have shifted to a hawkish stance regarding their monetary policy with the USA being a prime example of this.
On the contrary, the Central Bank of Japan has remained dovish almost acting as a lone solider compared to other countries in this regard. Despite this, as bond yields have begun to settle down and the market has begun to price in recession fears and inflation, the YEN has become attractive again. Technical Analysis Looking at the technical elements of the chart, the price is down from the multi decade highs of 139 that it reached in the middle of July.
Importantly the price has also dropped below the most recent support level. In addition, the price has also breached the 50-day moving average. The question that remains is whether this is a simple retracement or the signs of a reversal occurring.
There are two characteristics of this price action that support the potential bounce back to the upside for this currency pair. Firstly, on the daily, chart, although the price did break through the initial first level of support it is currently holding the next stronger level down at 131/132. In addition, looking at the weekly chart, the price is showing a relatively strong bounce off the same 131/132 zone.
This multi timeframe analysis, further supports the continuation of the upward trend of the pair. The midterm buy target may be a retest of the 140 level. There is a large risk with this trade.
If the ‘Top’ is indeed ‘in’ and the pair does start to falter, then there is risk of massive selling. This is because the pair is already so overextended to the buy side. In addition, a rush to close Yen short positions may further accelerate the move back downward.
If this does occur and the 130 level breaks it may see the price fall to the 125 level. The short-term future of the pair will still likely be determined by short term economic news and activity within both Japan and the USA.
