Daily Technical News EUR/USD : Struggles Near 1.1800 Amid USD Strength, Eyes Resistance at 1.1840

EUR/USD slipped to about 1.1802 on 24 September 2025, weakening modestly in Asian trade as the U.S. dollar regained some composure. The euro pair continues to face headwinds, caught between modest bullish signals and stronger support for the dollar.
Technical Setup & Key Levels
The pair is attempting to build upward pressure, but momentum remains fragile. According to Economies.com, EUR/USD has declined in recent intraday sessions in its effort to regain bullish momentum. It remains trading above its 50-period EMA, which is providing some support.
Resistance is clustered around 1.1840, a supply zone that if cleared, could open room for mid-September highs to return. Support lies lower at 1.1730, followed by deeper floors near 1.1690 and 1.1650 if pressure continues.
Momentum indicators are mixed. Relative Strength Index (RSI) is attempting to recover from overbought levels, suggesting buyers are reentering slowly. But the trend strength (as measured by ADX or equivalent) still lacks conviction, indicating the pair may remain in a choppy range until a clear trigger emerges.
What’s Driving EUR/USD Today
Underlying the technical tug-of-war is renewed dollar support. Market participants are reacting to U.S. macro data and positioning ahead of Fed Chair Powell’s upcoming statements. The dovish narrative from recent rate cuts has been tempered by caution from Fed officials about inflation and timing of further easing.
In Europe, mixed economic data has failed to provide a clear boost for the euro. Meanwhile, global sentiment — including trade developments or safe-haven flows — could sway momentum quickly in either direction.
Outlook & Trading Bias
The near-term outlook is neutral-to-bearish unless EUR/USD can convincingly clear 1.1840. In that case, the next resistance cluster could push toward 1.1900+. On the downside, a break below 1.1730 might drag the pair toward 1.1650 or lower.
Traders should watch for Powell’s remarks, key U.S. data (inflation, labor), and European confidence or growth prints for catalysts. Price action around the 1.1840–1.1730 zone will likely determine the short-term bias.