 On Tuesday, the Fed Chairman Jerome Powell told senators that the Fed doesn't want to run through the bond market like an elephant. Whatever that means. We found out that the U.S. may retail sales surge 17.7 percent, the biggest monthly jump ever in the U.K. Employment fell by 600,000 since lockdown as the U.K. faces the biggest jobs crisis in at least 25 years, and even the Swiss economy is expected to shrink by the worst rate in decades. Welcome to the Tick-Mill Update. I'm Cana Daniela, 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. On Wednesday, we'll be eyeing the inflation rates from the U.K., Eurozone and Canada, as well as New Zealand's GDP and Australia's jobs report. Today, I'm looking at the Aussie dollar pair, which failed to break above the weekly e-mail cloud last week and is attempting it again this week. The future cloud has turned bullish, however the 0.70 level has historically been a very strong resistance. Depending on this week's data and if the pair is able to come from the break above this level, we could expect a medium-term gain towards the next key resistance levels of 0.74 and 0.79 respectively. Do you think this is just the beginning for Aussie dollar pair gains or that it's going to go back down again? 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-Mill YouTube channel. I'll get back to you with more updates tomorrow.