|

EUR: Supported with firmer data and ceasefire – BNY

BNY's Head of Markets Macro Strategy Bob Savage notes Eurozone producer prices fell on energy weakness while ex‑energy pressures stayed positive, and retail sales showed modest annual growth despite monthly softness. German manufacturing orders and services turnover improved, while French trade and current account balances deteriorated. He links these data to a Euro rebound and lower core bond yields after the ceasefire.

Mixed data as Euro firms post ceasefire

"Eurozone’s February industrial producer prices fell 0.7% m/m and 3.0% y/y, while EU prices declined 0.5% m/m and 2.7% y/y, driven primarily by a sharp drop in energy prices."

"On an annual basis, energy prices declined 11.7%, while other categories recorded moderate increases, indicating underlying price pressures remain positive outside energy."

"Across member states, the largest monthly declines were seen in Spain, Ireland and Portugal, while Bulgaria, Finland and Sweden recorded the strongest annual increases, highlighting continued divergence in producer price dynamics across the region."

"Eurozone’s February retail sales volumes declined 0.2% m/m, with the EU down 0.3%, reflecting weaker food sales and broadly flat or slightly negative non-food performance, partly offset by gains in fuel sales."

"Germany’s February manufacturing orders rose 0.9% m/m, with stronger underlying momentum as orders excluding large contracts increased 3.5%, driven primarily by gains in the automotive sector (+3.8%) alongside sharp growth in textiles (+45.2%) and metals (+3.7%), partially offset by a steep decline in other transport equipment (-25.9%)."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD advances to three-week high above 1.3400 as UK political risk eases

The GBP/USD pair builds on Wednesday's gains and trades in positive territory above 1.3400 during the early European trading hours on Thursday. Fading political uncertainty following the resignation of Keir Starmer in late June provides some support to the British Pound against the US Dollar. However, the risk-averse market atmosphere could limit the pair's upside.

EUR/USD climbs toward 1.1450 despite Mideast tensions

EUR/USD gains traction in the European session on Thursday and advances toward 1.1450. Despite the escalating tensions in the Middle East, the US Dollar (USD) struggles to find demand and allows the pair to stretch higher. Weekly Jobless Claims data will be featured in the US economic calendar.

Gold rebounds to $4,100 but struggles to gather momentum

Gold manages to stage a rebound and clings to modest daily gains near $4,100 following a three-day slide. With Middle East hostilities reviving fears of high global inflation, which could cause major central banks to refrain from easing monetary conditions, XAU/USD finds it difficult to gather momentum.

Hyperliquid: Short-term noise in HYPE price masks breakout potential to $100

Hyperliquid continues to slide for the fourth consecutive day this week as retail demand eases amid broader market risk-off sentiment. A surge in HIP-3 Open Interest reflects steady demand for tokenized Real World Assets, amid institutional inflows that support the broader upward trend.

Japan may be changing its Yen strategy, but markets don’t look scared
Japan may be changing its intervention playbook, but that might not be enough to rescue the battered Yen. With USD/JPY hovering at four-decade highs, the currency’s weakness is being driven less by speculative pressure and more by a powerful structural force: the wide US-Japan rate gap.
Bye, forward guidance: How to trade when central banks choose silence

Central banks have spent years telling markets what might come next. Now, traders face the possibility that they say a lot less. From the Federal Reserve to the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, policymakers are pushing back against forward guidance.