EUR/USD stays above 1.1050 ahead of important US data.

EUR/USD is holding gains above 1.1050, consolidating the pullback from 13-month highs of 1.1095 on Thursday. The pair is underpinned by a broadly subdued US Dollar and cautious optimism. All eyes remain on the US advance Q1 GDP release.

Concerns about banking contagion risks in the United States (USD) resurfaced after the First Republic Bank reported more than $100 billion in customer withdrawals during the first quarter. This, along with the debt ceiling standoff and fears that the US economy is heading towards recession, revive speculations about an imminent rate cut by the Federal Reserve (Fed) later this year. This, in turn, weighed heavily on the Greenback and remained supportive of the pair’s overnight strong move up.

The shared currency, on the other hand, drew support from improving consumer sentiment in Germany – the Eurozone’s largest economy. In fact, the German Gfk Consumer Confidence improved from -29.3 to -25.7 in May. This marked the seventh increase in a row and indicated that consumer sentiment is gathering momentum. Adding to this, income Expectations rose from -24.3 to -10.7 and returned to the level before the start of the war in Ukraine for the first time. Apart from this, expectations for more rate hikes by the European Central Bank (ECB) in the coming months provided an additional boost and pushed the EUR/USD pair closer to the 1.1100 mark.

The USD bulls, meanwhile, failed to gain any respite from the upbeat release of US Durable Goods Orders, which surpassed even the most optimistic estimates and rose 3.2% in March. Excluding transportation, new orders increased by 0.3% during the reported month as against market expectations for a 0.2% fall and the 0.3% decline registered in February. The US Treasury bond yields, however, moved higher in reaction to the better-than-expected US macro data. This, along with the risk-off impulse, extended some support to the safe-haven Greenback, which, in turn, kept a lid on any further gains for the EUR/USD pair and led to a late pullback of over 50 pips.

Spot prices, however, attract fresh buying on Thursday and holds steady around mid-1.1000s during the Asian session as traders now await the release of the Advance Q1 GDP report from the US. The growth in the world’s largest economy is expected to have slowed to a 2.0% annualized pace during the January-March period from 2.6% in the previous quarter. Even a slight disappointment will be enough to prompt fresh selling around the USD and allow the EUR/USD pair to capitalize on its recent upward trajectory witnessed since mid-March. The focus will then shift to the flash German CPI and the US Core PCE Price Index – the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge – on Friday.

Concerns about banking contagion risks in the United States (USD) resurfaced after the First Republic Bank reported more than $100 billion in customer withdrawals during the first quarter. This, along with the debt ceiling standoff and fears that the US economy is heading towards recession, revive speculations about an imminent rate cut by the Federal Reserve (Fed) later this year. This, in turn, weighed heavily on the Greenback and remained supportive of the pair’s overnight strong move up.

The shared currency, on the other hand, drew support from improving consumer sentiment in Germany – the Eurozone’s largest economy. In fact, the German Gfk Consumer Confidence improved from -29.3 to -25.7 in May. This marked the seventh increase in a row and indicated that consumer sentiment is gathering momentum. Adding to this, income Expectations rose from -24.3 to -10.7 and returned to the level before the start of the war in Ukraine for the first time. Apart from this, expectations for more rate hikes by the European Central Bank (ECB) in the coming months provided an additional boost and pushed the EUR/USD pair closer to the 1.1100 mark.

The USD bulls, meanwhile, failed to gain any respite from the upbeat release of US Durable Goods Orders, which surpassed even the most optimistic estimates and rose 3.2% in March. Excluding transportation, new orders increased by 0.3% during the reported month as against market expectations for a 0.2% fall and the 0.3% decline registered in February. The US Treasury bond yields, however, moved higher in reaction to the better-than-expected US macro data. This, along with the risk-off impulse, extended some support to the safe-haven Greenback, which, in turn, kept a lid on any further gains for the EUR/USD pair and led to a late pullback of over 50 pips.

Spot prices, however, attract fresh buying on Thursday and holds steady around mid-1.1000s during the Asian session as traders now await the release of the Advance Q1 GDP report from the US. The growth in the world’s largest economy is expected to have slowed to a 2.0% annualized pace during the January-March period from 2.6% in the previous quarter. Even a slight disappointment will be enough to prompt fresh selling around the USD and allow the EUR/USD pair to capitalize on its recent upward trajectory witnessed since mid-March. The focus will then shift to the flash German CPI and the US Core PCE Price Index – the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge – on Friday.

Tags: No tags

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *