EUR/USD fell marginally after the ECB left rates unchanged on Thursday, as expected, while downplaying recent dollar weakness and saying the inflation outlook remains stable despite trade and geopolitical uncertainties. Meanwhile, the pound tumbled after the BoE voted narrowly 5–4 to keep rates unchanged, while signalling that borrowing costs are likely to fall if the anticipated slowdown in inflation is sustained. ECB President Christine Lagarde said the decision to stand pat was unanimous, risks are balanced, and that dollar moves remain within a long-standing range though bank is monitoring. Separately, the ECB is exploring ways to widen access to euro liquidity for more countries to strengthen the euro’s international role, sources said. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said that investors’ roughly 50-50 expectations for a cut next month were “not a bad place to be,” while striking an upbeat tone on the outlook. U.S President Donald Trump said Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi had his "total endorsement" ahead Sunday's elections, adding that they would meet March 19 at the White House. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he would not support scrapping Canada tariffs, flagged uncertainty over China’s digital-asset ambitions, left open legal questions should Trump disagree with Fed nominee Kevin Warsh's policy, and said Russia sanctions hinge on Ukraine talks. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Russia peace talks backed by the U.S. will continue soon after a second round, adding Kyiv raised further POW swaps. Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said adapting Canada’s economy to U.S. tariffs, slower population growth and artificial intelligence will take years and could be painful. The dollar pulled back from a near two-week high as U.S. tech shares slid and Treasury yields fell following a surprise rise in weekly jobless claims and a five-year low in job openings.
EUR/USD edged down toward 1.18 as risk appetite faded, with a daily doji and declining RSI signalling ongoing bearish consolidation, even as lower Treasury yields and short-covering support.
GBP/USD fell to near 1.3550 after the BoE’s narrow 5–4 hold signalled a dovish tilt, pulling forward cut odds and leaving bearish technicals in control for a possible test of the November lows.
USD/JPY printed an indecisive doji above the cloud top after touching a near two-week high of 157.34, with options markets still reflecting a mildly bullish bias heading into Japan’s weekend elections.
AUD/USD dipped to around 0.6940 amid risk-off flows and weaker metals after Rio Tinto ended takeover talks with Glencore, before a softer dollar later left technical signals broadly bullish.
Bitcoin tumbled nearly 9% to its lowest level since November.
Treasury yields were down 6 to 8 basis points as the curve steepened. The 2s-10s curve was up marginally to a four-year high near 72.1bp.
The S&P 500 slid 1.14% with futures looking to fill a December price gap near 6800.
WTI oil fell almost 3% after the U.S. and Iran agreed to hold talks in Oman on Friday.
Gold rose 2%, silver dropped 13% and copper eased 0.4%. Heading toward the close: EUR/USD -0.08%, USD/JPY +0.02%, GBP/USD -0.82%, AUD/USD -0.46%, DXY +0.19%, EUR/JPY -0.10%, GBP/JPY -0.79%, AUD/JPY -0.47%.(Editing by Burton Frierson Reporting by Robert Fullem)
















