The EUR/USD dropped further during the American session and bottomed at 1.0643 reaching the lowest level in a week amid a stronger US dollar on the back of risk aversion triggered by higher yields.
The euro peaked versus the US dollar on Thursday at 1.0773, the highest level in a week following the European Central Bank announcement. The central bank, as expected, kept interest rates unchanged and said it intends to raise rates at the July meeting by 25 bps.
“We adopt the ECB's implied near-term profile, and now expect a 25bps hike in July and a 50bps hike in September. Beyond that, we look for a further 50bps hike in October before the ECB slows the pace to 25bps hikes in December, February, and March. This would take the depo rate to 1.50%, which we believe is the ECB's estimate of its neutral rate”, explained analysts at TD Securities.
During Lagarde’s press conference the euro lost momentum even as German bond yields hit fresh multi-year highs at 1.46%. EUR/CHF tumbled from above 1.0500 to 1.0370 and EUR/GBP hit level under 0.8500.
In the US, Initial Jobless Claims rose more than expected, to the highest level in 20 weeks. On Friday, May’s CPI is due and next week is the FOMC meeting.
The slide of the EUR/USD so far found support around the 1.0635 zone. It is a relevant area that also contains the 20-day Simple Moving Average. A daily close below should weaken the outlook for the euro, exposing the next support level at 1.0585 followed by 1.0520.
If the pair remains above 1.0640 it will likely continue to trade in the range 1.0640/1.0750. A break above the upper limit should clear the way for an extension of the recovery.
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