Markets · Forex

Currency Strength & Correlation

Relative strength across the eight majors, derived from session % change, plus the pair relationships worth knowing before you trade.
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Currency Strength Meter

Each currency is scored by averaging the session % change of every pair it appears in (base adds the move, quote subtracts it). Bars are scaled to the biggest mover right now.

Demo / fallback data
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Live strength activates when quote providers return all required pairs.

AUD
+0.41%
9/10
CAD
-0.23%
3/10
CHF
+0.00%
5/10
EUR
+0.29%
8/10
GBP
+0.13%
6/10
JPY
-0.50%
1/10
NZD
+0.23%
7/10
USD
-0.32%
2/10

Strongest 3

1. AUD+0.41%2. EUR+0.29%3. NZD+0.23%

Weakest 3

1. JPY-0.50%2. USD-0.32%3. CAD-0.23%

Market read

Rule-basedBased on demo/fallback data

AUD and EUR are leading while JPY and USD are weak. This may support AUD/JPY and EUR/USD if the pattern continues.

This is informational, not a trade signal.

Pair Correlation

Common relationships between popular pairs, in plain English. These are tendencies — not rules.

EUR/USD GBP/USD
Positive correlation

Typical relationship: +0.82 typical positive — not a live correlation reading.

Often move together.

Both pairs price a European currency against the US dollar, so broad USD moves usually push them in the same direction.

Correlation can change during news events.

EUR/USD USD/CHF
Inverse correlation

Typical relationship: -0.78 typical inverse — not a live correlation reading.

Often move opposite.

USD sits on opposite sides of these pairs — when EUR/USD rises, USD/CHF tends to fall, and vice versa.

Correlation can change during news events.

AUD/USD NZD/USD
Positive correlation

Typical relationship: +0.74 typical positive — not a live correlation reading.

Often move together.

AUD and NZD are closely linked commodity currencies in the same region, so they frequently track each other against the dollar.

Correlation can change during news events.

XAU/USD USD
Inverse macro relationship

Typical relationship: Inverse (macro-driven, no fixed value) — not a live correlation reading.

Often move opposite.

Gold is priced in dollars — a stronger USD often pressures gold lower, while a weaker USD often supports it.

Correlation can change during news events.

Correlation and strength are informational only and can change quickly during news or volatility.