Originally published by CMC Markets
The euro has been on a steady climb for the past several months but cracks have started to emerge in the trend at the same time that the ECB may be starting to talk the single currency back down. It appears to be reaching a technical tipping point that could be accelerated by this week’s ECB decision and comments
Technicals
Since the start of 2017, EUR/USD has been under steady accumulation, rallying up from $1.0325 to a recent test of $1.2000.
Last week, however, a number of bearish technical signals emerged. A breakout over $1.2000 failed to hold in a buying climax/bull trap/shooting star. This key reversal day arrived in the middle of a bearish Evening Star three day topping pattern.
Adding to the problems, a new high for the pair was not confirmed by the RSI a negative divergence that indicated upward momentum was slowing. On Friday, a second attempt to break though $1.2000 failed and the pair now looks vulnerable to a correction. Next potential support appears near $1,1900 then $1.1830.
Fundamentals
The euro’s big rally this year was propelled by a number of factors including:
- A retreat in the US dollar
- Anticipation that the ECB would back away from its dovish stance and accelerate tapering back QE stimulus.
- Speculation that the EU would hold the upper hand in Brexit talks.
- Decreasing political risk concerns after populist forces lost elections in the Netherlands and France.
In the past week, some of these trends have shown signs of reversing. The Evening Star top in the euro was mirrored by a Morning Star bottom in the US Dollar Index, so the US dollar effect could be about to reverse.
For this week, the ECB may be the most important factor. Just as EUR/USD approached $1.2000 for a second time, the ECB announced that a decision on QE tapering would likely come in December, which was viewed as dovish as the street had been expecting an announcement in October. This suggests that the ECB may be starting to get worried about the rising currency and could be set to throw up a wall near $1.2000. This week’s ECB statement and press conference with President Draghi may give a better indication of whether the central bank is thinking enough is enough on allowing the single currency to rise.
This week also could confirm whether we have reached a turning point in EUR/GBP as well. The euro has been outperforming the pound for months but staged a technical reversal at about the same time that ECB negotiators were expressing frustration with the progress of talks. It seems that they thought the UK was going to come to the table grovelling and instead have found out the hard way that the UK is going to be a lot tougher in talks than the EU had considered. Because of this the end result is not going to be as one sided as euro bulls had thought and not the easy win the EU had been looking for.