USD/SGD is under near-term pressure towards 1.2760, after a sharp drop from 1.2929, near the 55-week EMA at 1.2940. Key resistance levels are 1.2900, the 55-week EMA at 1.2939, and 1.2950.
Earlier in March, USD/SGD moved above a minor declining weekly trendline near 1.2755. This follows a late-January low of 1.2586, with support levels at 1.2760, 1.2660, and 1.2586.
Momentum Outlook And Key Support
Momentum indicators are mixed, with weekly slow stochastic turning up from oversold territory and the weekly MACD remaining positive. A break below 1.2760 is possible, but without stronger downside momentum, 1.2660 may stay intact.
A sustained move below 1.2586 is currently less likely. The article notes it was produced with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.
Looking back at the analysis from March of last year, we noted the potential for a recovery in USD/SGD during the second quarter of 2025. That recovery did materialize, pushing past the key 55-week EMA resistance we were watching near 1.2940. This move was largely fueled by the Federal Reserve’s decision to keep interest rates elevated throughout the second half of 2025.
The situation has now changed considerably as we enter the second quarter of 2026. The most recent US CPI data released for March 2026 showed inflation cooling to 2.8%, increasing market expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut by mid-year. This contrasts sharply with last year when inflation concerns were the primary driver of dollar strength.
Implications For Volatility Strategies
On the Singapore side, economic data has been softer, with preliminary Q1 2026 GDP growth coming in at a modest 1.5% year-on-year. This has led to speculation that the Monetary Authority of Singapore may ease its currency appreciation policy later this year. These opposing pressures on the USD and the SGD are creating significant uncertainty for the pair’s direction.
For derivative traders, this environment of conflicting central bank signals suggests a rise in volatility over the coming weeks. A long volatility strategy, such as buying a straddle on USD/SGD with a one or two-month expiry, could be effective. This position would profit from a significant price move in either direction, without needing to predict whether the Fed or MAS policy shift will have the greater impact first.
Key levels to watch are the recent highs around 1.3200 and the psychological support at 1.3050. A decisive break of this range will likely trigger the next major trend. Traders should therefore position for a breakout, as the pair is unlikely to remain in this tight consolidation for long given the shifting economic fundamentals.