- November 7, 2025
- Posted by: EWGFX
- Category: Technical analysis
When “second-tier” data become market movers, volatility isn’t far behind. With the shutdown sidelining official U.S. reports, traders are hanging on every tick from private labour surveys, sending the US dollar on a rollercoaster against the euro and yen.
Shutdown leaves markets leaning on private U.S. data for rate clues.
Conflicting ADP and Challenger signals spark big swings in FX and bonds.
EUR/USD, USD/JPY moves hint at potential trend shift.
Summary
With the shutdown silencing official data, private U.S. releases like ADP and Challenger are driving the market narrative, sparking volatility in yields and currencies and producing price signals in EUR/USD and USD/JPY that may prove unreliable.
Second-Tier Surveys Dominating Direction
While traders may be accused of jumping at shadows, U.S. data once considered second-tier are now driving major market moves, particularly those tied to the labour market. Just look at the attention the ADP and Challenger surveys have received this week, dominating headlines where they’d normally be overlooked.
But with no official data forthcoming due to the government shutdown, they’re all markets have to assess the outlook for the U.S. economy and interest rates, providing conflicting signals that have sparked large swings in rates and forex markets.
The influence of these private surveys is highlighted below, showing how changes in Fed rate cut pricing have influenced EUR/USD and USD/JPY direction over the past week, fortnight and month.

Source: TradingView
The left pane tracks the shape of the Fed funds futures curve between November 2025 and December 2026, offering a rough guide to how many cuts are priced in over the period. Until Thursday, the trend had been towards fewer cuts, with the total falling as low as 75 basis points on Wednesday following solid reads from the ADP and ISM services PMI for October.
However, data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas 24 hours later revealed October layoffs surged to the highest level since 2003, pushing pricing back up to 83 basis points.
These data points—usually ignored in what’s traditionally a nonfarm payrolls week—are now major market movers, and not just in the rates space. As shown by the rolling correlation coefficients between Fed rate cut pricing and EUR/USD and USD/JPY, they’re also having a significant impact on the US dollar, especially over the past fortnight and month. For EUR/USD, the correlations sit at 0.9 and 0.8, while USD/JPY comes in at -0.8 and -0.86, respectively.
Fed Rate Cut Pricing Key
When you account for market convention on how these pairs trade, it suggests that, more often than not, over those periods, moves in rate cut pricing have gone in the opposite direction to the US dollar—as seen on Thursday when the USD softened as rate cut pricing swelled. That helped deliver price signals in both EUR/USD and USD/JPY, suggesting a trend change may be emerging.

Source: TradingView
On the EUR/USD daily chart, a three-candle morning star was completed Thursday—a bullish reversal pattern that warns of upside risk. The strong move saw the pair push back to 1.1550, where it’s done plenty of work either side of over the past month. While it may only be a minor level, it can be used to establish fresh setups depending on how near-term price action evolves.
Should the bullish signal prove reliable—which I have some doubts about, given it was derived from a second-tier survey known for its volatility—longs could be established above 1.1550 with a stop beneath for protection, targeting the September downtrend initially, found around 1.1600 today. If that were to be broken, 1.1650 and the 50-day moving average are other options to consider.
But if price stalls at 1.1550, the setup could be flipped, allowing shorts to be established beneath with a stop above, targeting either Wednesday’s low or support at 1.1455. RSI (14) and MACD signals remain bearish, with both sitting at levels where short setups are favoured.