|

EUR/USD resumes decline as early Mideast ceasefire hopes fade

  • EUR/USD slumps to near 1.1530 as fading Mideast ceasefire hopes revive risk-off mood.
  • US ADP Employment Change and the ISM Manufacturing PMI data for March outperform estimates.
  • Higher oil prices have weighed heavily on the Euro.

The EUR/USD pair is down 0.5% to near 1.1530 in the European session on Thursday, resuming its decline after a two-day recovery move. The major currency pair faces intense selling pressure as the US Dollar (USD) strengthens due to fears that the Middle East war is far from over.

As of writing, the US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against six major currencies, trades 0.5% higher to near 100.00.

Earlier in the day, United States (US) President Donald Trump announced that Washington will intensify military attacks against Iran in the next two to three weeks, and will target every Iranian electric generating plant if the nation doesn’t approve a deal.

US President Trump’s fresh threats have prompted risks that the Middle East war will last long, which has underpinned risk-off impulse again. On Wednesday, market sentiment turned risk-on after both the US and Iran signaled willingness to end the war.

Apart from the risk-off mood, the upbeat US ADP Employment Change and ISM Manufacturing PMI data for March have offered strength to the US Dollar. On Wednesday, the ADP reported that the private sector created 62K fresh jobs in March, significantly higher than the 40K estimate, but slightly lower than 66K in the previous month. The Manufacturing PMI arrived higher at 52.7 against estimates of 52.5 and the prior release of 52.4.

Meanwhile, the Euro (EUR) has come under pressure due to accelerating oil prices amid renewed fears that the Middle East war will last long. Higher oil prices are unfavorable for the Euro, given that the European Union (EU) relies heavily on oil imports to meet its energy needs.

Economic Indicator

ADP Employment Change

The ADP Employment Change is a gauge of employment in the private sector released by the largest payroll processor in the US, Automatic Data Processing Inc. It measures the change in the number of people privately employed in the US. Generally speaking, a rise in the indicator has positive implications for consumer spending and is stimulative of economic growth. So a high reading is traditionally seen as bullish for the US Dollar (USD), while a low reading is seen as bearish.

Read more.

Last release: Wed Apr 01, 2026 12:15

Frequency: Monthly

Actual: 62K

Consensus: 40K

Previous: 63K

Source: ADP Research Institute

Traders often consider employment figures from ADP, America’s largest payrolls provider, report as the harbinger of the Bureau of Labor Statistics release on Nonfarm Payrolls (usually published two days later), because of the correlation between the two. The overlaying of both series is quite high, but on individual months, the discrepancy can be substantial. Another reason FX traders follow this report is the same as with the NFP – a persistent vigorous growth in employment figures increases inflationary pressures, and with it, the likelihood that the Fed will raise interest rates. Actual figures beating consensus tend to be USD bullish.

Author

Sagar Dua

Sagar Dua

FXStreet

Sagar Dua is associated with the financial markets from his college days. Along with pursuing post-graduation in Commerce in 2014, he started his markets training with chart analysis.

More from Sagar Dua
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD bounces back to 1.3200 after strong UK Retail Sales data

GBP/USD finds fresh buyers and rebounds to the 1.3200 mark in early Europe on Friday. Stronger-than-expected UK Retail Sales data provide a much-needed lift to the British Pound and the pair amid a chaotic UK political environment.

EUR/USD holds losses below 1.1450 on firmer US Dollar

EUR/USD stays in the red below 1.1450 in the European session on Friday. The pair loses ground as the US Dollar (USD) continues to benefit from the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) hawkish policy outlook and canceled negotiations between the US and Iran in Switzerland.

Gold slumps to one-week low; $4,100 back in sight amid bullish USD

Gold continues losing ground through the Asian session, and touches a fresh weekly trough around the $4,122-$4,121 region in the last hour. The US Dollar retains its bullish bias near the highest level since May 2025 in the face of the US Fed's hawkish tilt, which is seen undermining the non-yielding bullion for the third straight day.

Solana extends correction despite ETF inflows, RWA adoption

Solana (SOL) price edges below $70 extending its losses for the fourth straight day this week. The institutional demand for Solana is building, with steady inflows so far this week and Morgan Stanley’s amended S-1 filing for a Solana-focused Exchange-Traded Fund.

 Back above 100: Kevin Warsh’s first Fed meeting sparks US Dollar rally

The US Dollar Index did a phoenix comeback, rising from its ashes and reconquering 100. The reasons behind the US Dollar rally are pretty clear: the Memorandum of Understanding between the United States and Iran, and a hawkish Federal Reserve. Both events were long-awaited and much expected. However, the market reacted with surprise when there were no surprises at all.

The next big AI trade may not be about chips or software

Artificial intelligence has already created some of the biggest winners in modern market history. Chipmakers have surged, data centre construction is booming, and electricity demand forecasts are changing globally.