Weekly Forex News & Market Pulse | 9 Feb. – 13 Feb. 2026
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Weekly Forex News & Market Pulse

9 Feb. – 13 Feb. 2026

This week was all about high-impact volatility as forex markets reacted to major macro triggers like US CPI and NFP expectations, shifting Federal Reserve rate-cut sentiment, and surprise geopolitical headlines. From GBP weakness after UK GDP, to JPY safe-haven strength, and gold surging on uncertainty, every session brought sharp moves. Here’s your complete weekly breakdown of what moved the market and why it mattered.

1. US Dollar on Edge as CPI & NFP Data Drive Global Market Volatility

This week, global markets stayed highly sensitive as traders positioned ahead of major US economic releases like Retail Sales, CPI, Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP), and Housing data. These reports were key because they directly shape Federal Reserve rate expectations and influence risk sentiment worldwide.

Impact: USD pairs stayed volatile. Traders avoided heavy positions, and market liquidity tightened before major data-driven moves.

2. ECB Rate Decision Update: European Central Bank Extends Interest Rate Pause

The European Central Bank kept interest rates unchanged this week, extending its longest rate pause in years. The ECB maintained a cautious stance as inflation slows but growth remains weak. Markets interpreted the decision as slightly dovish, keeping rate-cut expectations alive.

Impact: EUR saw choppy movement. The euro gained short-term stability, but upside remained limited due to the weak eurozone growth outlook.

3. Fed Independence Risk Sparks Fear: Bundesbank Warning Shakes Global Confidence

A major headline this week came after Germany’s Bundesbank warned that political pressure on the US Federal Reserve could weaken Fed independence. Investors reacted strongly because central bank credibility plays a major role in controlling inflation and maintaining global financial stability.

Impact: Risk sentiment weakened. Safe-haven flows increased, gold stayed supported, and traders became cautious on USD and global equities.

4. UK GDP Report Disappoints: Weak Growth Puts British Pound Under Pressure

The UK GDP report showed weaker-than-expected growth, confirming the British economy ended 2025 in a slow recovery phase. This raised fresh concerns about recession risk and increased speculation that the Bank of England may turn more dovish in upcoming meetings.

Impact: GBP weakened across the board. GBPUSD and GBPJPY faced selling pressure as rate-cut expectations increased.

5. Global Stock Markets Rise, But Investors Stay Defensive Ahead of Inflation Data

Global equity markets pushed higher this week, led by strong US tech performance and improved investor sentiment. However, traders remained defensive because CPI inflation and NFP jobs data were still the biggest market-moving triggers. Many funds reduced risk exposure before the reports.

Impact: Risk-on flows supported equities, but volatility stayed high. Traders quickly shifted between safe-haven and high-beta currency setups.

6. Japanese Yen Strengthens as Safe-Haven Demand Returns Before Key US Events

The Japanese yen gained strength this week as traders moved toward safe-haven assets. With uncertainty rising around US CPI inflation and NFP data, investors reduced exposure to risky trades. Yen demand increased as global sentiment turned cautious during mid-week sessions.

Impact: JPY strengthened across major pairs. USDJPY pulled lower, and yen crosses saw sharp volatility due to shifting risk sentiment.

7. Trump-Linked Forex Platform Launch: World Liberty Financial Enters FX Remittance Market

This week, Trump-linked World Liberty Financial announced a new forex remittance platform aimed at cheaper cross-border transfers. The move gained attention because it targets traditional banking FX systems and could impact retail money flows. Markets saw it as another signal of financial disruption.

Impact: USD sentiment stayed mixed. Crypto-linked and fintech currency flows gained attention, increasing speculation around future FX liquidity changes.

8. Putin and Trump Deal Speculation: Russia May Return to US Dollar Settlement System

Reports this week suggested Russia could return to using the US dollar for trade settlements under a possible Trump-led economic partnership. This was a major global headline because it challenges the recent de-dollarisation narrative and signals a potential shift in global payment systems.

Impact: This supported USD dominance expectations. Forex traders saw it as bullish for the dollar long-term, but short-term volatility remained high.

9. Dollar Safe-Haven Debate: Analysts Question if USD Still Protects Traders During Risk-Off

A major forex discussion this week focused on whether the US dollar is still a true safe-haven asset. Some strategists warned that political uncertainty and rising debt concerns may weaken the dollar’s protective role during market panic, changing traditional forex behaviour patterns.

Impact: USD trades became less predictable. Traders leaned more toward JPY and CHF during risk-off moves instead of relying only on the dollar.

10. Middle East Tension Boosts Oil Volatility: Traders Watch Iran Risk and Energy Supply Fears

This week, markets stayed alert due to rising Middle East tensions and fears of possible conflict escalation. Oil prices remained sensitive as traders monitored supply risk headlines. Since energy prices strongly affect inflation, this also added pressure to global central bank expectations.

Impact: Oil volatility supported safe-haven currencies. CAD and NOK reacted to crude swings, while risk sentiment weakened across major forex pairs.

11. Munich Security Conference: Trump’s Foreign Policy Pressure Raises Eurozone Uncertainty

This week’s Munich Security Conference highlighted growing tension between the US and Europe as Trump’s approach created uncertainty around NATO alignment and future cooperation. Markets tracked this closely because geopolitical risk can influence capital flow shifts between USD and EUR assets.

Impact: EUR sentiment stayed unstable. Risk traders avoided aggressive euro longs, while safe-haven demand kept CHF and JPY supported.

Major Currency Pair Movements

EUR/USD: Pair stayed volatile as the ECB rate pause supported the euro, but US CPI and NFP uncertainty kept traders cautious. Euro upside remained limited due to the weak growth outlook.

GBP/USD: The pound weakened after disappointing UK GDP data. BoE rate-cut expectations increased, keeping GBP under pressure throughout the week.

USD/JPY: Yen strengthened as safe-haven demand increased before major US events. Risk-off sentiment and market uncertainty pushed USD/JPY lower in multiple sessions.

EUR/JPY: Pair saw sharp swings as the euro remained stable after the ECB decision, while the yen gained strength from safe-haven flows. Volatility stayed high due to risk sentiment shifts.

GBP/JPY: One of the most bearish pairs this week. Weak UK data hit GBP while safe-haven buying supported JPY, creating strong downside pressure.

USD/CHF: Swiss franc demand increased as traders questioned the US dollar’s safe-haven role. Political uncertainty and global risk headlines kept the CHF supported.

EUR/GBP: The euro gained relative strength against the pound due to UK GDP weakness. The pair stayed bullish as traders rotated away from GBP positions.

AUD/USD: The pair remained sensitive to the global risk mood. Early risk-on supported AUD, but later safe-haven flows and US data caution limited upside momentum.

USD/CAD: Oil volatility and Middle East tension kept CAD unstable. The pair moved with crude price swings while traders waited for US inflation and labour market updates.

NZD/USD: Kiwi stayed range-bound with mild bullish attempts during risk-on sessions. However, USD event risk and cautious sentiment prevented a clean breakout.

XAU/USD (Gold vs Dollar): Gold stayed supported as Fed independence fears, geopolitical tension, and risk-off flows boosted demand. Traders treated gold as a strong hedge this week.

Trader’s Takeaway

  • USD trades were all about CPI + NFP positioning: This week proved that major moves start before the news, so next week, focus on pre-news consolidation zones and breakout levels.
  • ECB rate pause kept the EUR stable, but not strong: Traders should watch EUR/USD for trend confirmation instead of assuming euro strength just because the ECB stayed neutral.
  • UK weakness made GBP the weakest currency theme: GBP pairs showed clear bearish pressure, so next week traders should look for pullback entries in GBP/USD and GBP/JPY.
  • JPY remained the real safe-haven winner: Risk-off flows supported yen strongly, meaning next week JPY pairs can still trend if market sentiment stays defensive.
  • Oil headlines mattered more than expected: Middle East tension created sudden volatility, so USD/CAD and CAD pairs should be traded with strict risk management.
  • Gold acted like the market fear indicator: XAU/USD strength confirmed uncertainty, so next week, gold can help traders confirm risk-on vs risk-off sentiment.
  • Political headlines are now market-moving triggers: Trump-related news and Fed independence concerns showed that macro politics can shift forex trends quickly, so traders should stay alert for surprise spikes.
  • This week’s biggest lesson: Volatility is back. Next week, traders should focus more on clean price action setups and avoid over-leveraging during high-impact sessions.

What to Watch Next Week

  • USD Follow-Through After CPI + NFP: Next week's biggest focus will be whether USD continues trending or reverses after the post-news volatility.
  • Fed Rate-Cut Narrative: Markets are heavily pricing rate cuts. Any Fed comments or minutes can instantly shake EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and gold.
  • GBP Weakness Continuation: UK growth disappointment made GBP the softest currency theme. Watch if sellers stay in control or a recovery starts.
  • JPY Safe-Haven Strength: If risk sentiment remains weak, JPY can keep gaining. USD/JPY and GBP/JPY remain key trend pairs to watch.
  • Oil + Middle East Headlines: Any escalation can spike crude prices and trigger sharp moves in USD/CAD, gold, and overall market risk sentiment.

Weekly Market Summary

This week, the forex market remained highly volatile as traders reacted to major macro themes like US CPI inflation expectations, Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) positioning, and shifting Federal Reserve rate-cut sentiment. The US dollar (USD) stayed unstable, especially after rising discussion around Fed independence risk, which pushed investors toward safe-haven assets.

In Europe, the ECB interest rate decision kept the euro supported, but weak growth concerns limited strong upside in EUR/USD. Meanwhile, the British pound faced heavy pressure after a disappointing UK GDP report, increasing speculation around a Bank of England (BoE) rate cut, which kept GBP/USD and GBP/JPY bearish.

Risk sentiment also flipped multiple times as Japanese yen (JPY) strengthened due to safe-haven demand, while gold (XAU/USD) stayed supported by geopolitical uncertainty and inflation concerns. Adding to volatility, Middle East tension and oil price sensitivity created instability in commodity-linked currencies like CAD, making USD/CAD an important pair to track.

Overall, this week was driven by central bank policy expectations, inflation and employment data focus, geopolitical headlines, and risk-off flows, keeping major pairs like EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, and USD/CHF in strong movement zones.

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Disclaimer

This newsletter provides market insights and weekly summaries. These are expectations, not guarantees. Markets can change due to unexpected events. Always trade responsibly and use proper risk management.

R

Rajat Mehrotra
CMT, CFTe

Rajat Mehrotra is a forex market analyst and researcher with expertise in technical analysis, macro trends, and risk management.

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Weekly Forex News & Market Pulse Feb 9–13: GBP Crash, JPY Safe Haven