Currency Heat Map — Relative Strength of Major Currencies
See how currencies stack up against each other at a glance. A green cell means the row currency strengthened; red means it weakened.
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A currency heat map places eight major currencies against each other in a matrix. Each cell colors the percentage change of the row currency against the column currency: green for gains, red for losses. The darker the color, the larger the move.
Each value is derived from a currency's change against the Turkish lira (cross difference). The daily timeframe uses the live rate; weekly, monthly and 3-month use the daily official-rate series. Switch timeframes with the tabs and read the strength ranking strip to spot the strongest and weakest currencies.
How to Read the Heat Map
Pick a row (the base currency) and scan across the columns. A green cell means the base currency gained against that column currency; a red cell means it lost. For example, if the USD row meets the EUR column in green, the dollar strengthened against the euro. The diagonal is empty (a currency is not compared to itself).
What the Timeframes Tell You
The daily timeframe shows short-term momentum, weekly and monthly show the medium-term trend, and 3-month shows the broader direction. If a currency keeps the same color across all timeframes the trend is strong; changing colors signal short-term volatility.
Data Source and Limits
Values are computed from the daily official-rate series (Frankfurter/CBRT); the daily timeframe comes from a live rate snapshot refreshed roughly every 10 minutes. Intraday timeframes such as hourly are therefore not offered. The heat map is for educational purposes and is not investment advice.