 Welcome to the Tick Mill Update, I'm Kiana Daniela, the founder of the Investiva Movement. On Monday, we found out that the U.S. manufacturing activity rebounded in January. China's central bank took its first concrete steps to cushion the economy by cutting rates and injecting liquidity as the markets take a hit by coronavirus. And as a result, oil prices fell to the lowest in more than a year. We also found out that the Eurozone manufacturing sector contracted but at the lowest rate since April 2019 and that Australian jobs as increased by 3.8% in January 2020 following a 5.7% fall in December 2019. On Tuesday, we'll be getting the new Zealand's employment data and the Reserve Bank of Australia's government low gives a speech in Sydney, which is why today I'm going to look at the Aussie dollar pair, which is struggling to break below the key support level of 0.6689. The last time the pair saw prices below this level was March of 2009 after the extreme sell-off during the 2008 market crash. RBA's governor speech could finally release the signals to either push for a break below this level or bounce back off in a brand new uptrend. That being said, trading this risk event could be very risky as we can only guess which direction the pair can end up going. Very short-term traders with high risk tolerance could try to catch a few pips right after the risk event during the volatility, but if you're a long-term trader, I'd stay off the risk event and wait for the market to set a concrete direction. With that being said, do you think the recent weakness in the Aussie has already been priced in the price and what traders will take profit on a buy, the rumors sell, the news reaction, do you think? Head over to the comment section and let me know. Of course, trading the financial markets involves a risk of loss and you should only trade the money that you can afford to lose. If you like this video, give it a thumbs up and subscribe to the Tick-Mill YouTube channel. I'll get back to you with more updates tomorrow.