|

EUR/USD pares recent losses around 1.0900 with eyes on EU/US inflation, ECB Forum

  • EUR/USD consolidates the biggest daily loss in five weeks, the first weekly on in four amid market’s cautious optimism.
  • Weekend news from Russia, China allow Euro bears to take a breather.
  • Inflation clues from Germany, Eurozone and US will be crucial to watch, central bankers’ speeches from ECB Forum eyed too.

EUR/USD prints mild gains around 1.0900 as it begins the trading week on a firmer footing after teasing bears in the last week. In doing so, the Euro pair pares the biggest daily loss in five weeks as the weekend headlines allow traders to take a sigh of relief after witnessing a risk-off mood in the last week. Also underpinning the major currency pair’s rebound could be the consolidation ahead of this week’s top-tier inflation data and central bankers’ speeches from the US and Europe.

Talking about the weekend news, doubts about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s power in Moscow and hopes of major stimulus from China allowed trades to witness cautious optimism on early Monday and weighed on the US Dollar.

“Heavily armed Russian mercenaries withdrew from the southern Russian city of Rostov under a deal that halted their rapid advance on Moscow but raised questions on Sunday about President Vladimir Putin's grip on power,” said Reuters in this regard.

On the other hand, Ning Jizhe, deputy head of the economic committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and a former vice head of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) flagged concerns about sooner stimulus from China and allowed the EUR/USD to rebound, due to its business ties with Beijing. “China needs to step up measures as soon as possible to bolster a faltering post-COVID recovery in the world's second-largest economy,” said China’s Ning Jizhe per Reuters.

Even so, downbeat PMIs from Europe and Germany, versus not-so-disappointing activity data from the US, join the broad fears of recession to keep the EUR/USD bears hopeful.

On Friday, US S&P Global PMIs for June came in mixed as the Manufacturing PMI dropped to 46.3 from 48.4 prior, versus 48.5 expected, whereas the Services PMI improved to 54.1 from 54.0 expected despite being lesser than the 54.9 previous monthly figure. With this, the Composite PMI declined to 53.0 versus 54.4 market forecasts and 54.3 prior.

Following the data, Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence said, “Any further rate hikes will of course have a further dampening effect on this sector (services) which is especially susceptible to changes in borrowing costs." That said, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly told Reuters on Friday that two more interest rate increases this year would be a "very reasonable projection."

At home, the preliminary readings of Germany’s HCOB PMIs for June were downbeat. That said, the Manufacturing gauge worsened to 41.0 versus 43.5 expected and 43.2 prior whereas Services PMI also dropped to 54.1 from 57.2 previous readings and 56.2 market forecasts. With this, the Composite PMI dropped to 50.8 from 53.9 prior and 53.5 analysts’ estimations. On the same line, Eurozone HCOB PMIs were also downbeat as the headlines Manufacturing PMI dropped to 43.6 from 44.8 expected and prior while the Services PMI dropped to 52.4 versus 54.5 market forecasts and 55.1 prior. Further, the Composite PMI declined to 50.3 compared to 52.5 expected and 52.8 prior.

While portraying the mood, S&P500 Futures rise 0.20% intraday near 4,400 despite witnessing a downbeat week for Wall Street and gains of the US Treasury bond yields.

Moving on, Eurozone’s preliminary inflation report for June and the US Core Personal Consumption and Expenditure (PCE) data will be crucial to watch for clear directions. Also important will be speeches of the top-tier central bankers at the European Central Bank (ECB) Forum, as well as the US Bank Stress Test results.

Also read: EUR/USD Weekly Forecast: Bulls hesitate as concerns arise

Technical analysis

Failure to provide a daily closing below the 50-DMA, around 1.0870 by the press time, joins the nearly oversold RSI (14) line to trigger the EUR/USD pair’s bounce towards the 10-DMA hurdle of 1.0920.

Additional important levels

Overview
Today last price1.0904
Today Daily Change0.0010
Today Daily Change %0.09%
Today daily open1.0894
 
Trends
Daily SMA201.0809
Daily SMA501.0876
Daily SMA1001.0809
Daily SMA2001.0565
 
Levels
Previous Daily High1.096
Previous Daily Low1.0844
Previous Weekly High1.1012
Previous Weekly Low1.0844
Previous Monthly High1.1092
Previous Monthly Low1.0635
Daily Fibonacci 38.2%1.0888
Daily Fibonacci 61.8%1.0916
Daily Pivot Point S11.0839
Daily Pivot Point S21.0784
Daily Pivot Point S31.0724
Daily Pivot Point R11.0954
Daily Pivot Point R21.1014
Daily Pivot Point R31.1069

Author

Anil Panchal

Anil Panchal

FXStreet

Anil Panchal has nearly 15 years of experience in tracking financial markets. With a keen interest in macroeconomics, Anil aptly tracks global news/updates and stays well-informed about the global financial moves and their implications.

More from Anil Panchal
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD eases to four-week lows near 1.1650

EUR/USD now loses further momentum and recedes to multi-week lows near 1.1650 on Thursday. The pair’s extra retracement comes on the back of the persistent bid tone in the US Dollar as investors continue to gear up for the release of the December NFP figures on Friday.

GBP/USD: Further weakness could challenge 1.3400

GBP/USD remains under unabated selling pressure on Thursday, slipping to fresh three-day lows around 1.3415 in response to further improvement in the sentiment surrounding the Greenback ahead of Friday’s key NFP data.

Gold bounces back to its comfort zone

Gold now manages to regain some balance, fading its earlier pullback to the proximity of the $4,400 region per troy ounce and reshifting its attention to the $4,450 zone on Thursday. The yellow metal’s move lower comes in response to a better tone in the Greenback and the generalised recovery in US Treasury yields.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP extend decline as ETF outflows pose headwinds

Bitcoin struggles with selling pressure as institutional investor sentiment deteriorates. Ethereum hangs onto the 50-day EMA lifeline amid growing overhead risks and the resumption of ETF outflows.

2026 economic outlook: Clear skies but don’t unfasten your seatbelts yet

Most years fade into the background as soon as a new one starts. Not 2025: a year of epochal shifts, in which the macroeconomy was the dog that did not bark. What to expect in 2026? The shocks of 2025 will not be undone, but neither will they be repeated.

XRP slides as institutional and retail demand falters

Ripple is trading down for the third consecutive day on Thursday amid escalating volatility in the cyrptocurrency market. After peaking at $2.41 on Tuesday, its highest print since November 14 amid the early-year rally, XRP has quickly ran into aggressive profit-taking.