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(Bloomberg) — Traders are ramping up bets for a deeper divergence between European and US interest rates, setting the euro on a clear path for further weakness.
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The currency fell to to its lowest in nearly two weeks as soft inflation readings from Germany and France strengthened the argument that the European Central Bank will continue monetary easing this year following a rate cut on Thursday. The Federal Reserve kept rates on hold on Wednesday and hinted at a pause, ensuring the dollar remains a much more attractive currency.
The question is how deep the euro’s decline will turn out to be, with many forecasters betting that parity with the dollar is possible in the coming months. Traders are now fully pricing in three more cuts by the ECB before the end of the year and predict there’s a roughly 20% chance of a fourth reduction. The central bank may have to go deeper if US President Donald Trump acts on a pledge to impose punitive trade tariffs.
“This week’s central bank meetings confirm the divergence in policy,” said Matthew Landon, a global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank. Tariffs could further widen that gap, “bringing the possibility of euro-dollar parity back into contention,” he added.
Market pricing reflects the view that the ECB will cut its deposit rate to around 2% by the end of the year, after the central bank lowered it to 2.75% on Thursday. Pictet Wealth Management sees the rate falling to 1.75% this year, while Franklin Templeton expects policymakers will keep cutting until it hits 1.25%.
What Bloomberg Strategists Say…
“At current levels, the euro more than adequately reflects the balance of risks on domestic monetary policy. The exchange rate is, however, still vulnerable to risks stemming from US trade policy.”
— Ven Ram, Cross-Assets Strategist, Dubai
The prospect of deeper rate cuts has pushed German bonds higher, with the two-year yield falling to 2.12%, its lowest level in four weeks.
“Europe and the United States are on two very different paths,” David Zahn, head of European fixed income at Franklin Templeton, wrote in a note. The prospect of deeper cuts is “supportive” for European bonds, especially shorter maturities, he added.
Data published Friday show a fall in regional German inflation and an unexpectedly steady reading of French prices. That follows a Thursday release showing that euro zone growth stagnated in the fourth quarter. At the same time, solid US growth adds to the argument that the Fed will hold off easing.
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