|

The Euro is making its way up, breaking a long-standing trend

The single currency has been showing a trend of increasingly higher local declines throughout the month. Growth impulses in April and earlier in June hit an invisible soft ceiling approaching 1.15, but this appears to be only a temporary shake-up of positions after an impressive rise and before further growth.

The euro is supported by politicians who are one after another abandoning budgetary constraints in favour of stimulus measures. The stimulus measures are concentrated in the military sector, but this is largely irrelevant to the currency market. The recent decline in energy prices, an important item of industry expenditure, is also positive for the euro.

We also note the sustained support that EURCHF and USDCHF have experienced over the past couple of months, suggesting that the Swiss National Bank is working to curb the franc's growth, a familiar task for this central bank.

As a result of all these forces, the euro is trading close to 166 against the Japanese yen, near its October highs, adding 7.5% to its February lows. EURUSD is completing a corrective pullback from 1.1570 to 1.1060, which took place in April-May. Technically, breaking through the latest highs will make the next target the 1.24-1.25 area, surpassing the 2020 peaks.

This year's EURUSD growth has broken the long-term downward trend. However, confirmation will be needed with growth above the previous cyclical high in the 1.25 area before it is justified to talk about a new long-term growth cycle for the euro, like that seen in 2002. Fundamentally, this will require a return to soft monetary policy with a tolerant view of inflation slightly above 2% and a reduction in rates at the first signs of an economic slowdown. This is not Powell’s current approach, but who knows what fate awaits us around the corner?

Author

Alexander Kuptsikevich

Alexander Kuptsikevich, a senior market analyst at FxPro, has been with the company since its foundation. From time to time, he gives commentaries on radio and television. He publishes in major economic and socio-political media.

More from Alexander Kuptsikevich
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD: Bulls pray for a dovish Fed

EUR/USD has finally taken a breather after a pretty energetic climb. The pair broke above 1.1680 in the second half of the week, reaching its highest levels in around two months before running into some selling pressure. Even so, it has gained almost two cents from the late-November dip just below 1.1500 the figure.

GBP/USD trims gains, recedes toward 1.3320

GBP/USD is struggling to keep its daily advance, coming under fresh pressure and retreating to the 1.3320 zone following a mild bullish attempt in the Greenback. Even though US consumer sentiment surprised to the upside, the US Dollar isn’t getting much love, as traders are far more interested in what the Fed will say next week.

Gold: Bullish momentum fades despite broad USD weakness

After rising more than 3.5% in the previous week, Gold has entered a consolidation phase and fluctuated at around $4,200. The Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision and revised Summary of Economic Projections, also known as the dot plot, could trigger the next directional move in XAU/USD. 

Week ahead: Rate cut or market shock? The Fed decides

Fed rate cut widely expected; dot plot and overall meeting rhetoric also matter. Risk appetite is supported by Fed rate cut expectations; cryptos show signs of life. RBA, BoC and SNB also meet; chances of surprises are relatively low. Dollar weakness could linger; both the aussie and the yen best positioned to gain further. Gold and oil eye Ukraine-Russia developments; a peace deal remains elusive.

Week ahead – Rate cut or market shock? The Fed decides

Fed rate cut widely expected; dot plot and overall meeting rhetoric also matter. Risk appetite is supported by Fed rate cut expectations; cryptos show signs of life. RBA, BoC and SNB also meet; chances of surprises are relatively low.

Ripple faces persistent bear risks, shrugging off ETF inflows

Ripple is extending its decline for the second consecutive day, trading at $2.06 at the time of writing on Friday. Sentiment surrounding the cross-border remittance token continues to lag despite steady inflows into XRP spot ETFs.