USDJPY did not carry out its anticipated "tumble" until six or so hours after breaching the upper trendline, with all of the profits that might have stemmed from selling the pair coming in the first hour following the release of fundamental data. The pair is now once again bullish, so entry levels will only be offered following pullbacks to the south. You pretty much had the opposite situation with EURUSD...
AUDJPY is slightly bearish, but it has essentially gone nowhere over the last four weeks, so I wouldn’t consider it a very strong candidate to trade. AUDUSD has gone nowhere over the last two weeks.. EURGBP popped up midway through last week and has pulled back rather nicely during the last 24 hours, making it a hypothetically potential asset to buy. The only problem is this pair characteristically trends very poorly, making it extremely undependable. EURJPY’s upward momentum appears to have come to an end, at least for the time being. GBPJPY is just the opposite of EURUSD (see Post #282). GBPUSD looks like it turned bullish just past last week’s midpoint, which would make it a strong buy candidate if and when it comes out of its current pullback, except that this change in sentiment has yet to be confirmed by "the final arbiter." USDCAD has been modestly, yet solidly, bullish for the last two weeks, or even the last five weeks including pullbacks. USDCHF has been neutral for around the last two weeks. USDJPY acts like it might be rolling over.
I just went back, looked at all the four-hour setups still left in my records, put the best measures from each on one chart, and deleted all the other configurations. As a result, I'm revisiting the above forecasts and taking another look at them from the perspective of the "temporal" measure... AUDJPY still looks bad (not a strong trade candidate) but temporal resistance is presently at 100.94, so if anything, I would look to possibly go short somewhere in that neighborhood. AUDUSD also still looks bad (neutral for the past two weeks), but is sitting on temporal support, so here, I might go long if the four-hour price flow turns north. At the moment, temporal support for EURGBP is way down at 0.8319, but is almost certain to rise over the first 24-hour market cycle this upcoming week. Temporal support for EURJPY remains at 164.93. EURUSD is looking good, approaching temporal support at 1.0809. I hope I don't miss the opportunity to buy this pair (should it happen to manifest). GBPJPY bounced off temporal support at 195.38 a little over 24 hours before the closing bell last week, so it might be quite a bit of time before it comes back down to offer the next buy opportunity. GBPUSD is looking at temporal resistance way up at 1.2979. USCAD never hit temporal support last week, so if I wanted to trade this pair, I would have to look to buy if and when price comes halfway down. At the moment, USDCHF sees temporal support at 0.8627. And finally, USDJPY bounced off support at 151.78 not long ago, but could return there at any time, seeing as how it visited that level like three times in the past couple of days.
No buy, because the asset has turned bearish. All of the pairs are out of position for trading right now except for AUDJPY, which becomes a sell candidate if an when the hourly and two-hour price flows turn south.
The 100.08 neighborhood might be a bit optimistic. My numbers tell me I should be happy to pocket any available gains if AUDJPY manages to just reach as far as 100.34.