 Last week the U.S. dollar ended the week mixed, but net negative in a week filled with lots of FedSpeak and historically bad U.S. economic updates. But the talks of opening the economy back up had traders more risk-friendly as they dumped the U.S. dollar towards the weekend. The British pound, on the other hand, was a big net loser especially at the beginning of the week thanks to both no-deal Brexit fears and disastrous U.K. economic updates. Welcome to the Tick-Mill Update, I'm Kana Daniel, the founder of the Investiva movement. Make sure to subscribe to the Tick-Mill YouTube channel and support us by liking and sharing this video with your forex trading friends. This week we'll be focusing on New Zealand's interest rate decision as well as Australia's jobs report among other key economic data and coronavirus updates. Today I'm looking at the Aussie yen pair on the long-term time frame, the monthly chart. The pair was able to pull itself back up from the lows of March in the past month and a half and avoided dropping into the lows of 2008 and 2009 market crash period. This obviously had to do with a renewed optimism about the economy's opening back up during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, we need to keep in mind that countries opening up could also mean another surge in the COVID-19 cases and therefore yet another blow to the unemployment and the economy. With that in my opinion, a revisit of the lows of 55 is still not out of the question. Do you think the coronavirus impact on the markets has ended for good? Hit 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 liked this video, give it a thumbs up and subscribe to the Tick-My-Youtube channel. I'll get back to you with more updates tomorrow.