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Is Euro’s Rally Sustainable?

Published 06/21/2019, 04:01 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Kathy Lien, Managing Director Of FX Strategy For BK Asset Management

Daily FX Market Roundup June 21, 2019

Investors continued to dump the dollar, driving all of the major currencies higher in the process. Euro led the gains, rising to its strongest level in more than 2 months. Better-than-expected Eurozone PMI numbers created hope that the ECB could delay easing. In the forex market, currencies are driven by the latest turn of events and while the ECB talked rate cuts for the first time earlier this month, the most recent shift came from the Federal Reserve and the market was positioned the wrong way. The euro was deeply oversold and while some investors expected the Fed to be dovish, no one expected 8 members to flip their views and start favoring a rate cut this year. Thanks to the Fed, the short-term pullback in the U.S. dollar has now turned into a long-term top.

Technically, Friday’s move in EUR/USD took the pair above all major moving averages, opening the door for a stronger move up to 1.1500. Don’t expect next week’s economic reports to help the currency as the move in the euro right now is driven entirely by the market’s appetite for U.S. dollars. It's no secret that the EZ economy is slowing and inflation is weakening but more upside surprises would give EUR/USD traders a stronger reason to bid up the currency.

1-Day EUR/USD

While the fundamental outlook for the greenback shifted with the Fed’s guidance, traders need to be selective about the currencies that they choose to buy versus the dollar. USD/JPY is the most sensitive to headline risk. The biggest story next week will be the upcoming G20 meeting. If Presidents Trump and Xi reach a trade deal, we will see USD/JPY trade back up to 109; but if the talks fail to take a positive turn, the combination of continued trade tensions and a dovish Fed will allow USD/JPY to slip down to 105. While euro, sterling and Aussie are benefitting from U.S. dollar weakness, they are the least attractive currencies to buy because their central banks are also actively thinking about easing. Sterling on the other hand will be hampered by ongoing Brexit uncertainty. The Canadian dollar and Swiss franc are the most appealing but the New Zealand dollar could also be attractive if the Reserve Bank suggests that it has no immediate plans for a follow-up move to its rate cut in May.

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The Canadian dollar should start to underperform. Canada has been one of the strongest economies and in many ways still is, but after last week’s disappointing retail sales report the cracks are beginning to show and the currency is due for a correction. Retail sales rose only 0.1% in April, which is a dramatic slowdown from the 1.3% increase the previous month. We’ve also been skeptical of how much longer we’ll see CAD data surprise to the upside because at some point, Canada will feel the sting of weaker global growth and now that we have seen the first sign of weakness there should be a stronger sell-off in the loonie.

Latest comments

At one side you said CAD is one of the most appealing currency in current situation against dollar but then you said it would underperform. What really is your point ??
I’m still not sure about how sustainable the Euro rally will be but if I had to guess, I would say that it will pull back to around the 1.1270 area to shake out some stops and then continue on it’s bullish trend with some 30-40% pull backs along the way. The question is, is this just a temporary, emotional turn around that will be short lived or are we headed for a long term bullish trend do to an actual change in the value of the currencies?
There is no likelihood of a trade deal reached at G20 - TeamTrump (Navaro, Kudlow et al) have already said this. Some sentimental correction for GC EUR GBP might still happen but those are buying opportunities--as the biggest event next week isn't G20 but Iran theatre.  Trump just tweeted he is sitting at Camp David right now discussing Iran. When China, Russia, Trump and Fed all want to hammer down USD, nothing can stop it!
China and Fed want stronger dollar, Trump and Russia weaker dollar.. guess dollar strength shows where the power is at the moment..
Can the euro hit 1.15 dollars by the middle of July?
yes. Trump is SLOBBERING for a weak $USD. EURO is rally is sustainable.
EU is much worst shape than the USA, badly glued bunch countrys vs the actual states, long term euro is going down below 1.00
EUR can't beat USD to be a dovish
ok maybe its time to short the euro ,4 weeks ago you were suggesting  that euro will hit 1.10 and now its about to reach 1.15
altually euro almost hit 1.10 weeks ago... Q2 of euro will end up in 1.14 or more...
Is it still going up
sell off in loonie ? usdcad pair up?
We will see trap bulls in Euro & it will be heading to 1.1090
Nope
trapped bears ,euro is heading to 1.19
exactly
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