 On Thursday, we found out that the U.S. weekly jobless claims totaled 3.1 million, bringing the seven-week tally to 33.5 million. Canada's IV PMI fell to 22.8. In April, the U.K. house prices fell minus 0.6 percent in April. As the coronavirus restrictions took hold, oil jumped on China export bounds, but long-term outlook remains weak. Welcome to the Tick-My-Lap data, I'm Kana Danielle, the founder of the Investiva movement. Make sure to subscribe to the Tick-My-Lap YouTube channel and support us by liking and sharing this video with your forex trading friends. On Friday, we'll be eyeing Canada's and the U.S. unemployment rate, as well as the U.S. non-farm payrolls. Today, I'm looking at the dollar cap pair, which has just broken below the daily HMCL, but continues within a range between 1.41 and 1.38, which are the 38 percent and the 61 percent Fibonacci Tracement levels respectively. With that, the current bearish sentiment could be supported at 1.38 again, unless a new trend can be defined. And with that, traders with high risk tolerance could consider longing the pair at 1.38 and take profit at 1.41. Do you think 1.38 will act as a support level again, or do you think dollar cap pair will drop further this time? Head over to the comment section and let me know. Of course, trading in 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-My-Lap YouTube channel. I'll get back to you with more updates next week.