European stocks continued to plummet on Wednesday amid continued political and economic uncertainty in the European Union (EU) following the Brexit vote.
The following Forex news reports are the latest developments of the Forex market. The news reports are updated frequently and include all the events that affect the foreign exchange trading industry.
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China's yuan fell to its weakest level against the dollar since Nov 2010 on Wednesday, extending its slide to a fifth straight session after China's central bank sharply weakened its official guidance rate following the recent surge in the dollar.
Referendums may turn out to be catchy in Europe. Less than two weeks after Britons voted on whether or not to leave the EU, a referendum in another major EU country may be coming up.
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The results of the Australian election are still being tallied with 1.5 million postal and absentee votes yet unaccounted for.
The Bank of Israel bought "hundreds of millions" of dollars of foreign currency on Monday as the shekel continued to strengthen for a fifth straight session.
Sterling rose against the dollar for the first time in three sessions, ending its biggest two-week drop in more than seven years on Monday after U.K. authorities announced measures to keep the economy afloat while the country makes plans towards exiting from the European Union.
There is a heavier news schedule this week, which includes input from central banks concerning the USD, GBP and AUD, as well as the key U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls data sequence.
After the initial blow of Brexit, markets breathed a slight relief by the end of last week with both U.S. and global markets bouncing back from its initial self-off.
To the complete surprise of journalists and Brexit supporters, former London mayor Boris Johnson pulled out of the race to become Britain's prime minister Thursday.
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Market volatility following last week’s Brexit has settled down somewhat and global markets seem to be holding steady.
Asia stocks rose on Thursday, following an overnight Wall Street ally while the safe-haven Japanese yen was held steady as global markets regained composure after the Brexit jolt.
In the aftermath of the UK’s decision to head for the exit of the EU (and, as they say, it ain’t over until the fat lady sings…) external agencies have been assessing what that decision means as regards the creditworthiness of the nation.
Britain’s exit from EU membership may not actually happen but so far, the fallout of a Brexit doesn’t seem to be as bad as anticipated.
Despite continued jitters over the U.K.'s vote to leave the European Union, U.S. and European markets were higher on Tuesday spurring a $3 trillion post-Brexit global rout. Asia markets followed the lead and opened higher on Wednesday.
Asian stocks were up for the first time in three days on Tuesday and the pound and other currencies advanced as investors took advantage of lower prices to buy up assets following Britain's vote to exit the European Union.