EUR/USD extended its daily slide and touched its weakest level in 22 months below 1.0900. The broad-based dollar strength continues to weigh heavily on the pair after the February jobs report showed that Nonfarm Payrolls rose by 678,000, beating the market forecast of 400,000 by a wide margin.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) on the four-hour chart is now slightly below 30, showing that the pair is technically oversold. Hence, 1.1000 (psychological level) support could hold in the short term and the pair could stage a correction before the next attempt. In case buyers fail to defend that support, the next bearish target is located at 1.0960 (static level).
On the upside, former support of 1.1060 now aligns as initial resistance. The descending trend line coming from Monday reinforces that resistance as well. As long as this level stays intact, sellers should continue to dominate the pair's action. Above 1.1060, 1.1100 (psychological level, 20-period SMA) could be seen as the next resistance before 1.1150 (static level).