- USD/INR is currently trading around 64.34 marks.
- It made intraday high at 64.35 and low at 64.27 marks.
- Intraday bias remains bullish till the time pair holds key support at 64.27 marks.
- Key resistances are seen at 64.45, 64.60, 64.85, 64.98, 65.09, 65.18, 65.34, 65.52 and 65.80 marks respectively.
- On the other side, initial supports are seen at 64.27, 64.18, 64.07, 63.95, 63.65, 63.47 and 63.36 marks respectively.
- In addition, India’s NSE Nifty was trading around 0.30 percent higher at 9,914.70 points and BSE Sensex was trading at 0.31 percent higher at 32,120.60 points.
- Important to note here that 20D, 30D and 55D EMA heads down and confirms the bearish trend in a daily chart. Current upside movement is short term trend correction only.
We prefer to take long position in USD/INR around 64.32, stop loss at 64.21and target of 64.48/64.62/64.75.
FxWirePro launches Absolute Return Managed Program. For more details, visit http://www.fxwirepro.com/invest


AUDJPY: Bearish Setup Intact — Sell Rallies Near 103.30 Targeting 100
FxWirePro: NZD/USD downside pressure builds, key support level in focus
FxWirePro: USD/JPY dips as yen strengthens ahead of BOJ policy meeting
NZDJPY: Bearish Bias Persists — Sell Rallies Near 90 Targeting 88
FxWirePro: NZD/USD sidelined ahead Of key New Zealand GDP and US inflation update
FxWirePro: GBP/NZD remains bullish as rally continues
Yen Power Play: AUDJPY Crumbles Below 103.70 Resistance
FxWirePro- Major Crypto levels and bias summary
Yen Surge Dims NZDJPY Shine: Bearish Trend Holds Below 91 Resistance
FxWirePro- Major European Indices
FxWirePro: GBP/AUD consolidates around 2.0145, maintains bullish bias
FxWirePro: EUR/CAD gaining momentum for a move towards 1.6250 level
UK Economy Accelerates, But GBP/JPY Stays Capped – Sell Toward 206
FxWirePro: GBP/USD gains as UK manufacturing PMI beats expectations
EUR/JPY Bearish Outlook Persists: Ifo Weakness Caps Upside, Sell Rallies Targeting 180 Below 183 Resistance
FxWirePro- Woodies Pivot(Major)
USD Loses Shine: Soft Labor Market and Stalling Consumer Spending Drag USDCHF Lower 



