ہمارے بہترین اسپریڈز اور شرائط

From a fundamental perspective, the ECB stole the show. As expected, the central bank held the refinancing rate unchanged at 0.00%, and purchases, maintaining its forward guidance.
After a relatively dovish message in March, where the ECB surprised markets by signalling it was on track to end its stimulus program before the end of 2018, the risk to the Euro was that President Draghi would ratchet up his concerns over the outlook for the Eurozone economy. Indeed, Draghi acknowledged the growth slowdown, but he remains confident that inflation will reach target. This gave markets a mixed message and initially, the euro went bid before meeting strong supply at 1.2209 down to 1.2106 at the time of writing in late NY. The euro really got whacked when he said the euro area economy has broadly lost momentum across countries and sectors, with the declines sharp and in some cases unexpected. However, he managed to sugar coat the downturn with confidence that inflation was returning to target and with the following clarifications:
Other key headlines: (source LiveSquawk)