 On Tuesday, the Fed announced another $500 billion support for short-term bank funding. The U.S. dollar continued its rally on Tuesday, but earlier during Wednesday's Asian session, it saw a bit of a pullback. Meanwhile, we found out that the U.S. retail sales dropped 0.5% in February, and the Canadian manufacturing sales were down 0.2% in January, the fifth consecutive monthly decline. Welcome to the Tick-Mail Update. I'm Kiana Daniel, the founder of the Investiva movement. Make sure to subscribe to the Tick-Mail YouTube channel and support us by liking and sharing this video with your forex trading friends. On Wednesday, we will be looking at Canada's CPI, New Zealand's GDP, Japan's national CPI, and Australia's employment change on top of all the coronavirus developments, so it will be a busy day. On the charts, I'm looking at the Kiwi dollar pair, which conferred below the key support level of 0.62 and is on its way to 12-year lows of 0.58 and potentially even 0.49. These levels were last reached during the 2008 market crash. For many investors, shorting the markets could make sense if you think history is bound to repeat itself. Now, do you think the Kiwi dollar pair will drop to as low as 0.49? Head over to the comments 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-Mail YouTube channel. I'll get back to you with more updates tomorrow.